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Regents Biology 2006-2007 Biology is the only subject in which multiplication is the same thing as division…
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Regents Biology MITOSIS: Making New Cells Making New DNA
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Regents Biology Where it all began… You started as a cell smaller than a period at the end of a sentence…
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Regents Biology And now look at you… How did you get from there to here?
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Regents Biology Going from egg to baby…. the original fertilized egg (zygote) has to divide… and divide… Getting from there to here…
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Regents Biology Why do cells divide… One-celled organisms for reproduction asexual reproduction (clones) Multi-celled organisms for growth & development from fertilized egg to adult for repair & replacement replace cells that die from normal wear & tear or from injury amoeba starfish Binary fission regeneration
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Regents Biology Examples of Asexual Reproduction Binary Fission is the equal division of both the organism’s cytoplasm and nucleus to form two identical organisms Budding involves one parent dividing its nucleus (genetic material) equally, but cytoplasm unequally yeastprotist
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Regents Biology
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Sporulation (spore formation) reproduction involving specialized single cells coming from one parent
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Regents Biology Regeneration Grafting
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Regents Biology Asexual Reproduction Advantages Genetic continuity Faster Do not need a mate Disadvantages If environmental conditions change, may die out Disease could eliminate the population
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Regents Biology Dividing cells… What has to be copied DNA organelles cell membrane lots of other molecules enzymes animal cellplant cell
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Regents Biology Copying DNA A dividing cell duplicates its DNA creates 2 copies of all DNA separates the 2 copies to opposite ends of the cell splits into 2 daughter cells But the DNA starts loosely wound in the nucleus If you tried to divide it like that, it could tangle & break nucleus cell DNA
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Regents Biology Organizing & packaging DNA nucleus cell DNA nucleus cell 4 chromosomes in this organism DNA in chromosomes in everyday “working” cell DNA in chromosomes in cell getting ready to divide DNA has been “wound up” (chromatin)
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Regents Biology Chromosomes of Human Female 46 chromosomes 23 pairs
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Regents Biology Chromosomes of Human Male 46 chromosomes 23 pairs
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Regents Biology Copying & packaging DNA Copying DNA Coil DNA into compact chromosomes When cell is ready to divide… copy DNA first, then… coil up doubled chromosomes like thread on a spool… now can move DNA around cell without having it tangle & break
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Regents Biology What happens when DNA breaks? Mutations which can lead to…….. Cancer – uncontrolled cell growth melanoma
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Regents Biology double-stranded human chromosomes ready for mitosis
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Regents Biology DNA must be duplicated… nucleus cell DNA in chromosomes nucleus cell duplicated chromosomes chromosomes in cell 4 single-stranded chromosomes duplicated chromosomes 4 double-stranded chromosomes
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Regents Biology INTERPHASE CELL IS GROWING CHROMOSOMES ARE REPLICATED (COPIED)
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Regents Biology PROPHASE 1. CHROMATIN BECOMES CONDENSED (THICKER) 2. NUCLEOLUS DISAPPEARS 3. NUCLEAR MEMBRANE DISAPPEARS 4. CENTRIOLES BEGIN TO MOVE TOWARDS THE POLES 5. SPINDLE FIBERS START TO APPEAR 6. CHROMOSOMES BECOME VISIBLE
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Regents Biology METAPHASE CC HROMOSOMES LINE UP ALONG THE MIDDLE OF CELL
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ANAPHASE CC ENTROMERES SPLIT ALLOWING CHROMATIDS TO SEPARATE OO NE MATCHING CHROMATID MOVES TO EACH POLE
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Regents Biology
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TELOPHASE AND CYTOKINESIS CHROMATIDS AT OPPOSITE POLES SPINDLE FIBERS DISAPPEAR NUCLEAR MEMBRANE REAPPEARS CYTOKINESIS: CELL DIVIDES INTO TWO GENETICALLY IDENTICAL CELLS
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Regents Biology New “daughter” cells Get 2 exact copies of original cells same DNA “clones”
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Regents Biology
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Cell division in Animals
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Regents Biology Mitosis in whitefish embryo
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Regents Biology onion root tip
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Regents Biology KEYS TO MITOSIS Original cell has complete set of chromosomes This is known as DIPLOID or 2N DIPLOID One division results in 2 DAUGHTER CELLS No genetic material exchanged Cells are GENETICALLY IDENTICAL Daughter Cells are also DIPLOID or 2N Ex. Original cell has 46 chromosomes, daughter cells will have 46 chromosomes IN SINGLE CELLED ORGANISMS: Method of reproduction (ASEXUAL) Protists, some Algae, and Molds IN MULTI-CELLED ORGANISMS: Mitosis used for GROWTH and REPLACEMENT of BODY CELLS (skin, liver, heart etc…)
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Regents Biology Overview of mitosis interphaseprophase metaphaseanaphasetelophase cytokinesis I.P.M.A.T.C. P lease M ake A nother T wo C ells
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Regents Biology Basic diagram of mitosis HUMAN SKIN CELL 46Chromosomes 46Chromosomes 46Chromosomes 2 NEW HUMAN SKIN CELLS
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