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Cellular Metabolism and Reproduction: Mitosis and Meiosis
Chapter 4 Cellular Metabolism and Reproduction: Mitosis and Meiosis
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Introduction to Cellular Metabolism
Metabolism: total cellular chemical changes Anabolism: process of building up Catabolism: process of breaking down Calorie: measure of energy contained in food ATP: energy source available to the cell
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Cellular Metabolism or Biochemical Respiration
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Glycolysis Breakdown of glucose Anaerobic or aerobic process
Final outcome 2 pyruvic acid molecules, 2 ATP molecules (anaerobic), 8 ATP molecules (aerobic)
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The Krebs Citric Acid Cycle
Pyruvic Acid > Acetic Acid > Acetyl-CoA Acetyl-CoA enters Krebs cycle in mitochondria Final outcome 6 CO2, 8 NADH2, 2 FADH2, 2 ATP (GTP)
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The Electron Transport (Transfer) System
Series of reduction/oxidation reactions Requires O2 Electron carriers Number of ATP molecules dependent on electron carrier Water is a waste product
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Summary of ATP Production
During glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and electron transport Glycolysis: 8 ATP (aerobic) Krebs cycle and electron transport 28 ATP + 2 GTP or 30 ATP 1 glucose molecule yields 38 ATP
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Anaerobic Respiration
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Fermentation Yeast breaks down glucose anaerobically
Pyruvic acid broken down by decarboxylase Forms carbon dioxide and acetaldehyde Final products: 2 ATP, CO2, ethyl alcohol
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Anaerobic Production of ATP by Muscles
Pyruvic acid converted to lactic acid Accumulation of lactic acid causes fatigue in muscles When oxygen supplied, lactic acid turns back into pyruvic acid 2 ATP produced per glucose molecule
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Production of ATP from General Food Compounds
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Production of ATP from General Food Compounds (cont’d.)
Carbohydrates fit into cellular furnace at same level as glucose Can be stored in liver or as fat Fats digested into fatty acids and glycerol Glycerol enters at PGA stage of glycolysis Fatty acids enter Krebs citric acid cycle
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Production of ATP from General Food Compounds (cont’d.)
Proteins digested into amino acids Enter into Krebs cycle at different stages Dependent on chemical structure
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Introduction to Cellular Reproduction
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Introduction to Cellular Reproduction (cont’d.)
Process of cell duplication Mitosis: duplication of genetic material Cytokinesis: duplication of organelles Meiosis: reduction division only in gonads
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The Structure of the DNA Molecule
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The History of the Discovery of DNA
Friedrich Miescher, 1869: first discovery P.A. Levine, 1920s: composition Rosalind Franklin: helical structure Watson and Crick: three-dimensional structure
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The Anatomy of the DNA Molecule
Double helical chain of nucleotides Phosphate group Five-carbon sugars (deoxyribose) Nitrogen-containing base Pyrimidines (thymine and cytosine) Purines (adenine and guanine) Pyrimidines pair with purines Chains held together by hydrogen bonds
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The Anatomy of the DNA Molecule (cont’d.)
Gene: sequence of base pairs that codes for polypeptide or protein Human Genome Project 3 billion base pairs that code for 30,000 genes Duplication of DNA molecule Helicase separates at hydrogen bonds DNA polymerase adds new nucleotides
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The Cell Cycle
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Introduction All reproduction begins at cellular level Interphase
Previously called resting stage Mitosis Cytokinesis
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Interphase Time between divisions G1: Primary growth phase
S: DNA duplication G2: Centrioles complete duplication, mitochondria replicate, chromosomes condense and coil
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Mitosis Prophase Chromosomes become visible as chromatids joined by centromere Two kinetochores at the centromere Centrioles move to opposite poles Nuclear membrane breaks down Microtubules attach kinetochores to spindle
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Mitosis (cont’d.) Metaphase Chromatids align at equator of cell
Centromere divides
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Mitosis (cont’d.) Anaphase
Divided centromere pulls chromatids to opposite pole Cytokinesis begins
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Mitosis (cont’d.) Telophase Chromosomes uncoil and decondense
Spindle apparatus breaks down New nuclear membrane forms Cytokinesis nearly complete
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Animation - Mitosis Stop and watch a 3-D presentation of mitosis.
Click Here to Play Mitosis Animation
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Cytokinesis Animal cells Plant cells Cleavage furrow forms
Cell is pinched into daughter cells Plant cells Cell plate forms at equator Cell plate becomes new cell wall
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Meiosis: A Reduction Division
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Introduction Occurs only in the gonads
Reduces genetic material from diploid to haploid Two divisions resulting in four cells
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Stages of Meiosis Prophase I: homologous chromosomes pair and cross over Metaphase I: chromosomes align along equator Anaphase I: centromeres pulled to poles One member to each pole Telophase I: one of each pair is at each pole
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Stages of Meiosis (cont’d.)
Prophase II: spindle forms; centrioles move to poles Metaphase II: chromosomes line up at equator Anaphase II: centromeres divide Telophase II: chromatids at each pole; new nuclear membrane forms
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Animation - Meiosis Now that you have learned about the stages of meiosis, watch the meiosis animation for a visual of this process. Click Here to Play Meiosis Animation
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Gametogenesis: The Formation of the Sex Cells
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Gametogenesis: The Formation of the Sex Cells (cont’d.)
Spermatogenesis Four cells produced Develop into sperm Oogenesis Only one becomes functional egg
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Animation – Cancer Metastasizing
Refer to the Common Disease, Disorder or Condition box on Cancer in your textbook and read about the growth of cancer cells. Now watch the 3-D Cancer Metastasizing animation. Click Here to Play Cancer Metastasizing Animation
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Summary Discussed how glucose is converted into ATP in the presence of oxygen Discussed how glucose is converted into ATP in the absence of oxygen Described how fats and proteins are converted into ATP Discussed the cell cycle
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