Science 9 Cells and Reproduction The Cell Cycle Mitosis.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Review What are chromosomes Compare and Contrast How does the structure of chromosomes differ in prokaryotes and eukaryotes 2 Review What happens during.
Advertisements

Mitosis: Cell Division
Chapter 10.2 Cell Division.
Cell Division Mitosis. Mitosis is just one part of the cell cycle The Mitotic (M) phase is the shortest part of the cell cycle (Cytokinesis may be included.
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
The Cell Cycle and Mitosis
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division. The Cell Cycle
The Cell Cycle and Mitosis
STEELE Cell Division.
Mitosis.
1.2 Eukaryotic Cell Growth and the Cell Cycle Two Stages: INTERPHASE – G 1, S, G 2 MITOSIS (incl. CYTOKINESIS) 1.2 Cell Growth and the Cell Cycle.
Reproduction and Cell Division (8) Reproduction and Cell Division (5.8) Reproduction and Cell Division (5.8) The Cell Cycle and Mitosis (5.5) The Cell.
Genetics Cell Cycle Mitosis Meiosis.
copyright cmassengale
The Cell Cycle Science 9 Lesson #6.
Chapter Chromosomes are not visible in cells until cells begin the process of cell division. Chromosomes are not visible in cells until cells begin.
CELL CYCLE The life cycle of a cell consists of a repeating set of events.
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
MITOSIS the key to growth.
Mitosis.  Common to most living things  Sequence of growth and division of a cell.
The Cell Cycle.
(c) McGraw Hill Ryerson The Cell Cycle and Mitosis Due to the loss and death of cells, the body must replace them. A good example of this is human.
Mitosis Cell Division. Mitosis Mitosis is the process of cell division producing identical daughter cells from the parent cell. Used by single cell organisms.
Mitosis and the Cell Cycle DAY C 01/03/07 Objectives: Define the cell cycle. Describe the four phases of the cell cycle and mitosis.
Cell Reproduction Chapters 9 & 11. Types of Reproduction Mitosis Asexual – only 1 parent needed & the offspring are identical to the parent cell. Meiosis.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division. NOTES: 1. Write the purpose for each type of cell division. (mitosis & meiosis) 2. Draw, label and describe each phase.
Cell cycle and Mitosis.
Mitotic Cell Cycle Binary Fission Mitotic Cell Cycle.
Mitosis: “nuclear division” All living things follow a similar path from beginning to end.
Mitosis - Cell Division. Living organisms have life cycles. Life cycles begin with organism’s formation, followed by growth and development and end in.
Cell Division. Why do we grow? Do our cells get bigger? NO: organisms grow because they produce more cells, not larger ones. A baby’s cells are the same.
10-2 Cell division.
Cell Growth and Reproduction. Why Cells Must Divide In multi-celled organisms (like humans) cells specialize for specific functions thus the original.
The Cell Cycle.
Chapter 8 Part Two Cell Growth and Reproduction Cell Size Limitations  Cells vary in size and shape  The longest cells are nerve cells which can be.
Interphase. The cell is engaged in metabolic activity and performing its duty as part of a tissue. The DNA duplicates during interphase to prepare for.
Cell Division Mitosis. Produces 2 cells – called daughter cells – from one parent cell Daughter cells are identical to each another and to the original.
3/6/2016 Cell Division Cell divides into two daughter cells.
Cell Cycle and Mitosis Where you have to Divide to Multiply.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division (Eukaryotic cells).
Cell Cycle *Cellular Division. Reproduction ●Asexual reproduction: generates offspring that are genetically identical to a single parent. Requires only.
Cell Division J. Carmona Biology. Interphase  The cell is engaged in metabolic activity and performing its prepare for mitosis (the next four phases.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
MITOSIS. Animated Cycle
MITOSIS The Cell Cycle & Mitosis Tutorial. INTERPHASE The cell is engaged in metabolic activity and performing its prepare for mitosis (the next four.
Mitosis and the Cell Cycle
The Cell Cycle and Mitosis
Cell Division and Reproduction
 MITOSIS & CYTOKINESIS *centrioles – cylindrical shaped structures that make the spindle fibers *spindle fibers – cell structures that are made of microtubules.
Cell Reproduction.
Mitosis: Cell Division
Mitosis and the Cell Cycle
Mitosis and the Cell Cycle
Mitosis and the Cell Cycle
Mitosis and the Cell Cycle
2.4 The Cell Cycle.
Life of a Cell The Cell Cycle.
CELL DIVISION IS PART OF THE CELL CYCLE
The cell cycle has four main stages.
MITOSIS **Cell Division**
The Cell Cycle continued
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Mitosis Making new cells for growth
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Mitosis and the Cell Cycle
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Cell division is necessary for normal growth, repair, and reproduction of an organism.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Presentation transcript:

Science 9 Cells and Reproduction The Cell Cycle Mitosis

Understanding: What is mitosis?  Mitosis is the process by which cells divide.  Mitosis is the division of the nucleus  It results in cells with identical genetic information.  Mitosis happens as part of the cell cycle.

The Cell Cycle  The cell cycle is an ordered set of events.  Mitosis happens the same way every time for every cell.  It finishes with cell growth and the division of the cell into two daughter cells.

The Cell Cycle  The Stages of Mitosis  Mitosis is nuclear division plus cytokinesis, and produces two identical daughter cells during  Interphase  prophase,  metaphase,  anaphase  telophase.  cytokinesis

The Cell Cycle  Interphase is technically not part of mitosis, but rather is the growth and production phases of the cell cycle.

The Cell Cycle Interphase  The cell is engaged in metabolic activity (making what it makes) and preparing for mitosis.  Chromosomes are not clearly discerned in the nucleus, although a dark spot called the nucleolus may be visible.  The Cell is just “doing its thing”

The Cell Cycle Prophase  During prophase the chromosomes coil up. They become shorter and fatter. The nuclear envelope seems to disappear.  If you squash the cell and look at it under a microscope it is possible to see chromosomes and count them. You would see 46 chromosomes in a normal human cell.  This stage may take over one hour.

Prophase

The Cell Cycle Prophase to Metaphase… Prometaphase  The nuclear membrane dissolves, marking the beginning of prometaphase.  The chromosomes begin moving.

The Cell Cycle Metaphase  This is a very short stage in mitosis. The chromosomes move and line themselves up at the equator of the cell.  It should be possible with a good microscope to see that each chromosome has divided into two daughter chromatids. These are genetically identical to each other.  This stage only takes about 15 minutes

Metaphase

The Cell Cycle Anaphase  During anaphase the chromatids separate (are pulled apart) and move to the poles (opposite ends of the cell).  You may be able to see spindle fibres which help to pull the chromatids apart.  Although this stage only takes about ten minutes, it is the most interesting stage because it shows that the cell division is genetically exact.

Early Anaphase

Anaphase

Late Anaphase

Telophase  In the human cell, there are now 46 daughter chromatids at each end of the cell.  Each one uncoils: it gets longer and thinner.  It is no longer possible to see and count individual chromosomes.  This stage takes much longer but it is not so interesting.

Telophase

The Cell Cycle Cytokenesis  After mitosis has taken place (the division of the nucleus) the cell divides into two cells.  This process is called cytokinesis. New cell membrane is formed dividing the cell into two.  In animal cells, cytokinesis results when a fiber ring composed of a protein around the center of the cell contracts pinching the cell into two daughter cells, each with one nucleus.

The Cell Cycle Cytokenesis  In plant cells, the rigid wall requires that a cell plate be synthesized between the two daughter cells.

The Cell Cycle  Meiosis is another kind of cell division. This is the one which makes sperms and eggs. We’ll learn about that later.

The Cell Cycle Cells Alive Video

The Cell Cycle Think about….  You are made of billions of cells, they are all genetically identical to each other and identical to your original self when you were a fertilized egg or zygote.  If a cell divides once every day, how many cells will there be in a week?  How many in a month?  How many in a year?