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Chapter 6 Mitosis
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Last step in the cell cycle is Mitosis One cell splits and becomes two Linking Growth & Duplication 2
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Mitosis Stages of Mitosis Animals vs. Plants Asexual reproduction 3
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Centrioles Responsible for separation of chromosomes – During mitosis 4 Found only in animals Cytoskeleton formation & organization – Including mitotic Spindle
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5 Aster – binds centriole to membrane to pull apart chromosomes
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Mitosis 6
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Mitotic Stages The 5 Stages of Mitosis are: Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase Cytokenesis 7
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1. The end of G 2 Chromatin has been duplicated Organelles have been duplicated, including centrioles The Cell has undergone enough growth to divide All systems go to divide!!! 8
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2. Prophase The Chromatin coils In to Chromosomes – Sister chromatids attached at the centromere The Centrioles move apart forming a microtubules lattice called the Mitotic Spindle – Microtubules from each centriole catch the sister chromatids The nuclear membrane breaks apart 9
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3. Metaphase All the chromosomes line up along an imaginary mid-line called the metaphase plate Every pair of chromosomes are pulled in line – Microtubules from each centriole catch every pair of chromatids at Kinetochore 10
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The Metaphase Plate Imaginary Plane on which chromosomes line-up before separating 11
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4. Anaphase The connection between chromatids breaks down The sister chromatids are pulled to opposite centromeres Microtubules not connected to a chromosome push – cause the cell to elongate 12
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13 Microtubule Motor Protein Chromosome Movement
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5. Telophase The nuclear envelopes being to re-form around the two separate sets of DNA – Two nuclei The mitotic spindle breaks down A set of microfilaments being to form between the two nuclei – Divide the remainder of the cell in two 14
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6. Cytokenesis and Cleavage Microfilaments Contractile Ring Constricts creating a Cleavage Furrow – Will eventually separate the two cells Cytokinesis – the division of cytoplasm 15
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Cytokinesis in Animals The contractile ring pinches off the cell membrane between the two daughter cells Cleavage furrow forms along the metaphase plate 16
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Mitosis in Plants Mitotic stages the same 1.Plants lack centrioles – so microtubules connect to membrane/cell wall at opposite poles 1.Formation of the cell plate during cytokinesis 17
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Cytokenesis in Plants Cell Plate forms between the nuclei – Cellulose Cell plate extends to the parental cell wall – Cell membrane reforms along the cell plate 18
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Cytokenesis in Plants 19
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Growth in Plants 20
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Apical Meristems 21
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Cytokenesis in Bacteria Called Binary Fission DNA replicates – Copies move to opposite ends of the cell Cell wall and membrane extend Cell wall pinches off between cells 22
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Cytokenesis in Bacteria 23
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Unicellular Asexual reproduction One cell becoming two daughter cells Each become a separate organism 24 (Binary Fission)
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Asexual Reproduction Budding Occur in unicellular and some multicellular organisms 25 Offspring from a single parent – Clones – Genetically identical to parents
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Multicellular Asexual Reproduction 26
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Worlds Largest organism through Asexual reproduction The Honey Mushroom Armillaria ostoyae 2384 acres (~1665 football fields) Outcrops of fruiting bodies found across this area used to determine size – Maintain underground connections 27
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Review What is the goal of mitosis? – What is the genetic relationship of the daughter cells? How does Mitosis differ in Plants, Animals, and Prokaryotes (Bacteria)? – How is it similar? 28
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Review Produce two identical daughter cells Method of cleavage – Animals – Cleavage Furrow – Plants – Cell Plate – Bacteria – Binary Fission 29
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Questions How many copies of DNA must a cell have just before dividing? 30
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Questions Cells must have to copies of DNA, so they can be separate equally Copies of DNA are attached to each other as Sister Chromatids – Which seperate during mitosis 31
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