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Cell Cycle, Mitosis
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How do little elephants grow up to be BIG elephants?
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Why do animals shed their skin?
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The process of asexual reproduction begins after a sperm fertilizes an egg.
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Three reasons why cells reproduce by asexual reproduction:
Growth Repair Replacement Skin cancer - the abnormal growth of skin cells - most often develops on skin exposed to the sun. Cell that reproduce by asexual reproduction reproduce constantly.
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Cells Multiply By Dividing
Eukaryotes: Mitosis Meiosis Prokaryotes: Prokaryotic (binary) fission
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Mitosis is Nuclear Division
What is found in the nucleus?
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Chromosomes Chromosomes - contain the genetic information (DNA) that is passed from parent to offspring.
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Chromosomes Chromosomes have two parts: chromatids held together by a centromere. The chromatids are exact copies of each other and are split apart during mitosis to form single chromosomes. Chromatids Centromere
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Chromosome Replication
One chromatid Replication sister chromatids
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When cells divide, sister chromatids separate so that each cell has the correct number of chromosomes.
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46 … or … 23? Diploid Haploid 23 homologous pairs of (human) chromosomes (46 total, full number) Somatic (body) cells (every cell except sperm and egg) 23 individual chromosomes (half the full number) Gametes (Sex Cells: sperm and egg)
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Human Chromosomes Human diploid cells have 46 CHROMOSOMES – 2 COPIES OF 23 DIFFERENT CHROMOSOMES.
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The Cell Cycle for Somatic Cells (p244-245)
The Cell Cycle for Somatic Cells (p ) 2 Main Parts Interphase (life, growth) Mitosis (division of nucleus) Consider cytokinesis (division of cytoplasm) as part of mitosis 2 1
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Interphase Longer part of the cell cycle (90%) 3 Phases G1 (Gap)
S (Synthesis) G2 (Growth)
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During Interphase, DNA is relaxed and spread out thinly
During Interphase, DNA is relaxed and spread out thinly Thin, stringy, “Invisible,” chromosomes are called CHROMATIN
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The 3 Phases of Interphase
The 3 Phases of Interphase G1 (Gap): Cell is living, doing normal processes S (Synthesis): DNA replicates G2 (Growth): Cell is expanding, replicating organelles, getting ready for division No turning back after S phase starts! Cell will divide!
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What happens after interphase?
MITOSIS
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Cell Division Mitosis is NUCLEAR division
Cytokinesis is CYTOPLASMIC division We will call both (together) “Mitosis”
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Check Point: Why Do Cells Divide?
Check Point: Why Do Cells Divide? Growth Repair Reproduction Mitosis Meiosis
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In Mitosis: diploid, somatic cells divide to become
In Mitosis: diploid, somatic cells divide to become daughter cells (mitosis makes exact copies of cells) (*circle*) … diploid / haploid (*circle*) … somatic / gamete
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Mitosis Has 4 Main Phases Plus Cytokinesis (p246)
Mitosis Has 4 Main Phases Plus Cytokinesis (p246) PROPHASE METAPHASE ANAPHASE TELOPHASE (With Cytokinesis)
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Before we go any further, Let’s Learn Some Helpful Hand Signs!
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PROPHASE
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METAPHASE
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ANAPHASE
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TELOPHASE
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Got It? Now we’ll talk about what happens in …
M Prophase Metaphase A T Anaphase Telophase
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TELOPHASE & CYTOKINESIS
Make A Table PROPHASE METAPHASE ANAPHASE TELOPHASE & CYTOKINESIS WHAT IT LOOKS LIKE WHAT’S GOING ON
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PROPHASE Chromatin thickens into chromosomes
Centrioles Chromatin thickens into chromosomes Nuclear envelope disintegrates Centrioles migrate to opposite poles Centrioles begin producing spindle fibers
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METAPHASE Chromosomes line up along metaphase plate
Spindle fibers are made of microtubules Spindle fibers attach at the centromere of duplicated chromosomes Chromosomes line up along metaphase plate
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ANAPHASE Sister chromatids pulled apart to opposite poles
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TELOPHASE & CYTOKINESIS
Nucleus reforms Chromosomes begin to relax into chromatin (back to G1) Cytoplasm splits to separate daughter cells
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CYTOKINESIS (p248) In Plant Cells In Animal Cells Cell Plate
Cleavage Furrow (no cell wall) Cell Plate (to form cell wall)
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What could happen if cytokinesis fails?
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Can You Identify The Phases Of Mitosis?
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Could you find the phases on a prepped slide?
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Summary
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