Cell Growth and Reproduction Chapter 9. Chapter Objective Describe the processes of cell growth and cell reproduction (SPI 3210.1.6.)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction
Advertisements

Cellular Reproduction
Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction
Cell Division – Mitosis.  As the cell grows, its volume increases much more rapidly than the surface area.  The cell might have difficulty supplying.
Cellular Reproduction
12/9/14 Objective: What is the structure of a chromosome and what is its role in the cell cycle? Do Now: How many cells does mitosis produce?
Cellular Reproduction
Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction
Cell Growth Cell Cycle Mitosis & Cytokinesis
Click on a lesson name to select. Cellular Reproduction Section 1: Cellular Growth Section 2: Mitosis and Cytokinesis Section 3: Cell Cycle Regulation.
Cellular Reproduction
Ratio of Surface Area to Volume  As the cell grows, its volume increases much more rapidly than the surface area.  The cell might have difficulty.
Biology Ch. 10 Cell Growth and Division Core Content: SC-HS
Cellular Reproduction
Cellular Growth Chapter 9.
Cellular Reproduction
CHAPTER 8 Mitosis SP 2013.
Chapter 9, Cellular Growth and Mitosis. WHY ARE CELLS SO SMALL? As cells get larger, their surface area to volume ratio keeps getting smaller. In other.
Click on a lesson name to select. State Standard 2E. Compare the advantages of sexual reproduction and asexual reproduction in different situations.
Do Now!! 1. What happens to your body when you get a cut? 2. Explain in your own words what happens when you get cut and the healing process.
Click on a lesson name to select. Cellular Reproduction Section 1: Cellular Growth Section 2: Mitosis and Cytokinesis Section 3: Cell Cycle Regulation.
Cell Growth and Division. Why do cells divide? DNA “Overload” DNA “Overload” –Not enough information for a big cell Exchanging Materials Exchanging Materials.
Chapter 9 – Cellular Reproduction
Where were we and where are we going next? Cellular Reproduction Chapter 9.
Do Now 1.What happens to your body when you get a cut? 2.Make a drawing illustrating the healing process.
9.3 Cell Cycle Regulation Objectives Review Vocabulary
Chapter 9 Cell Reproduction. Cell Division Cell division is the process by which cells reproduce themselves.
9.2 Mitosis and Cytokinesis Objective: 5(A) Describe the stages of the cell cycle, including DNA replication and mitosis, and the importance of the cell.
12/3/13 Objective: What is the structure of a chromosome and what is its role in the cell cycle? Do Now: How many cells does mitosis produce?
Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction
9.3 Cell Cycle Regulation Cellular Reproduction Normal Cell Cycle  Different cyclin/CDK combinations signal cell activities, including DNA replication,
Cellular Reproduction.  As the cell grows, its volume increases much more rapidly than the surface area.  The cell might have difficulty supplying.
Click on a lesson name to select. Ch.5 Cell Growth and Division 5.1 The Cell Cycle 5.2 Mitosis and Cytokinesis 5.3 Regulation of the Cell Cycle 5.4 Asexual.
Cellular Reproduction (Eukaryotes) Biology - Chapter 9 Pages
Where were we and where are we going next? Cellular Reproduction Chapter 9.
The Cell Cycle  Remember: When cells get to large they cannot get enough nutrients into and out of the cell.  Cell division prevents the cell from becoming.
Chapter 10 Cell Growth and Division. Cell Reproduction Why do cells Reproduce? To help tissues and organs grow and to replace dead or damaged cells Cells.
Click on a lesson name to select. Cellular Reproduction Section 1: Cellular Growth Section 2: Mitosis and Cytokinesis Section 3: Cell Cycle Regulation.
Click on a lesson name to select. Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction Section 1: Cellular Growth Section 2: Mitosis and Cytokinesis Section 3: Cell Cycle.
Chapter 9 Cell Reproduction. 1.Ratio of Surface Area to Volume Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction What is the Surface area and volume of these cubes?
Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction 9.1 Vocabulary Cell Cycle Interphase Mitosis Cytokinesis Chromosome Chromatin.
Click on a lesson name to select. Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction Section 1: Cellular Growth Section 2: Mitosis and Cytokinesis Section 3: Cell Cycle.
Cell Growth and Division Chapter 10. Why would we need new cells???
MITOSIS. Cell Reproduction All cells come from pre-existing cells All cells come from pre-existing cells Cell division results in two identical cells.
Cell Reproduction: Ch : Growth…What is it? Getting larger Making more Division/ mitosis (eukaryotes) Binary Fission (prokaryotes)-budding.
Cell Growth and Division. Why do cells divide? DNA “Overload” DNA “Overload” –Not enough information for a big cell Exchanging Materials Exchanging Materials.
Do Now  If you have not already handed in your WebQuest packet, bring it to my desk.  Make sure your name is on it!
Chapter 9 Page 244 CELLULAR REPRODUCTION  Cells grow until they reach their size limit, then their either stop growing or divide.  Limitation for cell.
Cellular Reproduction
Mitosis.
Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction 9.1 Cellular Growth
Cell Cycle Regulation Normal Cell Cycle
Cellular Growth Ch 9.1.
Cell Cycle Regulation Normal Cell Cycle
Cellular Reproduction
Cellular Reproduction
Cell Structure Review. Cell Structure Review Microtubule close-up Plasma membrane microtubule microfilament.
Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction
Activating Prior Knowledge:
Cell Size The size of cell is related to its function
Do Now What happens to your body when you get a cut?
The Cell Cycle and Mitosis
Chapter 9: Cellular Reproduction
The Cell Cycle and Mitosis
Chapter Nine: Mitosis Notes pt. 1
CELL Reproduction (Division)
Cell Reproduction Chapter 9
Ratio of Surface Area to Volume
Cellular Growth Interphase is the stage during which the cell grows, carries out cellular functions, and replicates. Mitosis is the stage of the cell cycle.
Presentation transcript:

Cell Growth and Reproduction Chapter 9

Chapter Objective Describe the processes of cell growth and cell reproduction (SPI )

Section 9.1 The cell cycle multiplies cells

Section Objectives 1.Describe the structure and function of a chromosome. 2.Given a diagram or picture of a cell, identify whether the cell is in the interphase or mitotic phase of the cell cycle and explain what happens during each phase.

Key Terms chromatin chromosome sister chromatid centromere cell cycle interphase mitotic phase mitosis cytokinesis

Large Cells Can Have Problems!  As cells grow, their volume increases much more rapidly than their surface area!

Large cells may have difficulty supplying nutrients and expelling enough waste products. Why is size a problem?

Transport of Substances  Substances move by diffusion or by motor proteins.  Diffusion over large distances is slow and inefficient.  Small cells maintain more efficient transport systems.

Cellular Communications  The need for signaling proteins to move throughout the cell also limits cell size.  Cell size affects the ability of the cell to communicate instructions for cellular functions.

functionHow often a cell divides depends on the type of cell (its function). Eukaryotic cells that do divide undergo an orderly sequence of events known as the cell cycle. Cells Divide at Different Rates

The Cell Cycle  Cell division prevents the cell from becoming too large.  It also is the way the cell reproduces so that you grow and heal certain injuries.  Cells reproduce by a cycle of growing and dividing called the cell cycle.

 Interphase - the cell grows, carries out cellular functions, and replicates.  Mitosis - the cell’s nucleus and nuclear material divide.  Cytokinesis - a cell’s cytoplasm divides. The Cell Cycle

Phases of The Cell Cycle Interphase –G 1 (Gap 1 ) –S (DNA Synthesis) –G 2 (Gap 2 ) Mitotic (M) Phase Cytokinesis

The Cell Cycle

The Stages of Interphase  1 st stage - G 1  The cell is growing, carrying out normal cell functions, and preparing to replicate DNA.

 2 nd Stage – S  The cell copies its DNA in preparation for cell division. The Stages of Interphase

S phase Genetic material (chromosomes) duplicate)

 3 rd Stage - G 2  Cell prepares for division of nucleus (mitosis). The Stages of Interphase

Mitosis and Cytokinesis Concept 9.2 Cells divide during the mitotic phase

Section Objectives Given diagrams or pictures of cells in various stages of the mitotic phase of the cell cycle, identify and name the stages and explain what happens during each stage.

Key Terms prophaseprophase sister chromatidsister chromatid centromerecentromere spindle apparatusspindle apparatus metaphasemetaphase anaphaseanaphase telophasetelophase

Mitotic Phase Unique to eukaryotes Very accurate (error rate 1/100,000 cell divisions)

Centromere Chromosome duplication Sister chromatids Chromosome distribution to daughter cells Chromosome Prior to S phase Mitosis Duplicates the Nucleus (Chromosomes)

The Mitotic Phase

Stages of Mitosis Prison (Prophase) Men (Metaphase) Are (Anaphase) Thin (Telophase)

Prophase  The cell’s chromatin tightens.  Sister chromatids are attached at the centromere.  Spindle fibers form in the cytoplasm.

 The nuclear envelope seems to disappear.  Spindle fibers attach to the sister chromatids.

Metaphase  Sister chromatids line up in the middle of the cell.

Anaphase  Microtubules of the spindle apparatus begin to shorten.  Sister chromatids separate.  Chromosomes move toward the poles of the cell.

Telophase  The chromosomes arrive at the poles and begin to relax.  Two new nuclear membranes begin to form and the nucleoli reappear.  The spindle apparatus disassembles.

Process by which the cytoplasm of a cell is divided in two; usually follows mitosis and meiosis. Cytokinesis

Microfilaments constrict, or pinch, the cytoplasm to create a cleavage furrow Cytokinesis in Animal Cells

Cell wall too rigid for microfilaments to constrict cell. Cell plate created. Cytokinesis in Plant Cells

How Cytokinesis Differs in Plants

Section 9.3 Cell Cycle Regulation

Terms to know cyclincyclin cyclin-dependent kinasecyclin-dependent kinase cancercancer carcinogencarcinogen apoptosisapoptosis stem cellstem cell benign tumorbenign tumor malignant tumormalignant tumor metastasismetastasis

Normal Cell Cycle  Different cyclin/CDK combinations signal other activities, including DNA replication, protein synthesis, and nuclear division throughout the cell cycle.

Quality Control Checkpoints  Checkpoints in the cell cycle can stop the cycle if something goes wrong.

Apoptosis  Programmed cell death  Cells going through apoptosis actually shrink and shrivel in a controlled process.  Signals from the checkpoints can start apoptosis.

A disease caused by severe disruption of the mechanisms that normally control the cell cycle. Cancer

Abnormal Cell Cycle: Cancer  Cancer is the uncontrolled growth and division of cells.  Cancer cells can kill an organism by crowding out normal cells, resulting in the loss of tissue function.

Cancerous cells reproduce at an abnormally fast rate!

Benign: An abnormal mass of normal cells. Types of Tumors Malignant: A mass of abnormal cells resulting from uncontrolled cell division.

The spread of cancer cells beyond their original site Metastasis

Causes of cancer Genetic mutationsGenetic mutations FoodFood HormonesHormones RadiationRadiation TobaccoTobacco Weight & physical activityWeight & physical activity Workplace environmentWorkplace environment

Cancer Treatments SurgerySurgery Radiation therapyRadiation therapy ChemotherapyChemotherapy A mix of the threeA mix of the three

Stem Cells  Unspecialized cells that can develop into specialized cells when under the right conditions

Embryonic Stem Cells  After fertilization, the resulting mass of cells divides repeatedly until there are about 100–150 cells. These cells have not become specialized.

Adult Stem Cells  Found in various tissues in the body and might be used to maintain and repair the same kind of tissue  Less controversial because the adult stem cells can be obtained with the consent of their donor

chromatin: combination of DNA and protein molecules, in the form of long, thin fibers, making up the genetic material in the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell. chromosome: condensed threads of genetic material formed from chromatin as a cell prepares to divide. sister chromatid: one of a pair of identical chromosomes created during the S phase before a cell actually divides. Vocabulary Review

centromere: region where two sister chromatids are joined tightly together. Vocabulary Review (contd’) cell cycle: sequence of events from the production of a eukaryotic cell to the time the cell itself reproduces. interphase: stage of the cell cycle during which a cell carries out its metabolic processes and performs its functions in the body.

mitotic phase: stage of the cell cycle when a cell is actively dividing. mitosis: process by which the nucleus and duplicated chromosomes of a cell divide and are evenly distributed, forming two daughter nuclei. cytokinesis: process by which the cytoplasm of a cell is divided in two; usually follows mitosis and meiosis. Vocabulary Review (contd’)