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Mitosis,Cancer & Meiosis
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Types of Cells A. Somatic (Body Cells) - Have 46 Chromosomes B. Gametes (Sex Cells) - Egg & Sperm - Have 23 Chromosomes
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Cell Growth & Limiting Factors A. Cell size can vary greatly.
i.e. Red Blood cells (8um) & Nerve cells (1m) B. Cell size is limited. “Bigger is not Better!” Diffusion - Decreases as a cell grows. - Will take longer for waste to exit a cell or building blocks to enter a cell. DNA OVERLOAD Protein production is decreased.
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III. Chromatin versus Chromosomes
A. Chromatin - DNA when a cell is not dividing. - Loosely packed DNA that is wrapped around proteins (Histones).
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B. Chromosomes - DNA when a cell is dividing!
- Composed of tightly bound chromatin. Steps 1-3: DNA forms a chromosome, also called a chromatid. Step 4: The chromosome has replicated. Step 5: Duplicated chromosome, before division.
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IV. Why do cell divide? A. To replace old, worn out cells. B. To replace injured / damaged cells. C. For an organism to grow. D. For reproduction to occur.
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V. The Cell Cycle A. Growth & division of “somatic” cells. B. A cell has 2 general periods: 1. Interphase – The growth period. 2. Division – The production of “daughter” cells.
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C. Stages of the Cell Cycle:
1. INTERPHASE (3 sub-phases) a. G1 - Period of rapid cell growth. - Lasts roughly 11 hours. b. S - Will begin if the “Restriction Point” is passed. - DNA is synthesized / Chromosomes are copied. - Lasts roughly 7 hours. c. G2 - All organelles are copied - Lasts roughly 3 hours.
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- DNA coils & becomes chromosomes
2. MITOSIS (P.M.A.T) STEPS: 1. Prophase - DNA coils & becomes chromosomes - The chromosomes have already duplicated themselves and have identical halves called “Sister Chromatids.” - The nuclear envelope disappears. Centrioles separate and form spindle
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- The chromosomes (Sister Chromatids) line up along the equator.
2. Metaphase - The chromosomes (Sister Chromatids) line up along the equator. Spindle Fiber attaches to centromere of sister chromatid 3. Anaphase - All sister chromatids split. - One chromatid moves to each side of the cell. - Remember, each cell only gets 46.
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- The nucleus reappears. - Chromosomes uncoil into chromatin.
4a. Telophase - The nucleus reappears. - Chromosomes uncoil into chromatin. Spindle Fibers break down 4b. Cytokinesis - The cytoplasm finally breaks in two. End Result: Two new identical cells.
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Chromosome Numbers A. Diploid - Refers to cells which carry a double set of chromosomes. B. Haploid - Refers to cells with just one set of chromosomes. C. Homologous Chromosomes - Refers to two chromosomes which are similar in structure. - Each contains the same genes.
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Chromatid & Sister Chromatids 1. Chromatid
- One identical copy of a chromosome. 2. Sister Chromatids - Two identical chromatids connected together by the centromere. - Spindle fibers from centrioles will connect to the kinetechore (portion of centromere).
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Karyotyping Pictorial display of metaphase chromosomes from a mitotic cell. Homologous chromosomes Used to diagnose genetic disorders
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