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Don’t Panic Bonus #1 due today
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DNA Replication, Mitosis, and Cancer
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Genes are the parts of DNA that contain information.
CB 5.25 Protein
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For life to exist, the information (genes) must be passed on.
{Meiosis: producing gametes} For life to exist, the information (genes) must be passed on. {Mitosis: producing more cells}
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Mitosis
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The Cell Cycle [DNA Replication] CB 12.4
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Complementary base pairs suggest how DNA replication may occur
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DNA replication: each strand serves as a template for making a complementary copy
Origin of Replication
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DNA replication: each strand serves as a template for making a complementary copy
helicase O.R. helicase
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DNA replication: each strand serves as a template for making a complementary copy
helicase helicase The two strands of DNA are unwound.
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DNA replication: each strand serves as a template for making a complementary copy
helicase helicase The DNA is copied.
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DNA replication: each strand serves as a template for making a complementary copy
helicase helicase More unwinding, more copying
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DNA replication: each strand serves as a template for making a complementary copy
helicase helicase The DNA has now been copied. There are now two double-stranded DNAs
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Most DNA has multiple origins of replication
CB 16.10
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each strand serves as a template for producing a complementary copy
DNA replication: each strand serves as a template for producing a complementary copy CB 5.27
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Sometimes errors are made.
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Error Luckily, errors can be repaired.
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DNA Repair mismatch removed by enzymes DNA replaced repair complete
damage or replication error CB 16.17
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Not all errors get repaired.
These are mutations.
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Errors are made during DNA replication
3,000,000,000 (3 billion) base pairs/human cell with 1 error/1 billion base pairs not repaired = (average) ~6 errors each time DNA is replicated
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Mutations
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Cancer: Cell Division Gone Wrong
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Cell division is regulated by both positive and negative signals
Cell division is regulated by both positive and negative signals. Positive signals start the process of cell division. Negative signals inhibit cell division.
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CB 12.13
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Normal Mammalian Cells Have Contact Inhibition
CB 12.16
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Cancer Cells Do Not Have Contact Inhibition CB 12.16
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Cancer: is the loss of control over cell division.
Tumors are normal cells that are dividing inappropriately. They stop performing their “normal” function, and are dividing repeatedly.
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Tumors in a Liver normal tumors
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Normal Cells Cancer Cells
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A cell becomes cancerous when there are incorrect positive AND negative signals.
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GO! STOP! cancer CB 19.13
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Multiple mutations are required for a single cell to become cancerous.
CB 19.14
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Benign versus Malignant cancer
CB 12.17
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How do these incorrect signals arise?
Multiple mutations are required for a single cell to become cancerous. CB 19.14
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Mutations CB 17.22
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Don’t Panic Bonus #1 due today
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