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Published byElmer Hensley Modified over 9 years ago
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Pulling the Wool Over Mitosis... or, how you can help students understand the difference between chromosomes and chromatin.
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We have two ideas about DNA Think DNA... … you see a double helix.
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The other picture of DNA... Think “chromosome” and you see X’s (and an occasional Y).
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Chromosomes DNA is not neatly wrapped in chromosomes during most of the cell cycle Only during mitosis does DNA condense into “chromosomes.”
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Chromatin During the rest of the cell cycle, DNA is in the uncoiled or CHROMATIN form.
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Chromatin Model Teased sheep’s wool can model chromatin in a cell This is the wool as purchased from a crafts store
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Wool-as-chromatin Pull the wool loosely apart... … explain that during Interphase DNA must be loose in order to be transcribed into RNA.
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Chromatin Condensing In prophase, the chromatin must condense into chromosomes. In this model, the “chromatin” is spun into a thread.
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Chromosome Taking Shape As you twirl the fibers between your fingers, the “chromosome” takes shape. Limitation: Here many fibers form one “chromosome.” In a cell, one long DNA molecule condenses to form one single chromosome.
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Chromosomes Coil As you continue spinning, the “chromosome” will coil and supercoil on itself. Limitation: This model leaves out histone proteins and the specific levels of coiling and supercoiling.
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chromatin supercoiling condensing
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Credits and acknowledgements http://www.biotec.or.th/Genome/chromosome.JPG http://www.efa.org/images/research/chromosome.gif http://www.gifs.net/animate/webl2.htm
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