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CELLULAR REPRODUCTION This is the making of cells --not necessarily making babies HEY YOU WANNA SPLIT? Ok!
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Why do Cells Divide? 1. maintain surface area to volume ratio 2. growth of organism 3. repair damaged areas 4. replace worn out cells 5. pass on genetic information
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2 Forms of Cellular Division Asexual Reproduction Sexual Reproduction
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Asexual Reproduction production of new cells from one parent cell offspring cells identical to parent cell can make new cells or an entire organism
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Asexual production of whole organisms 1. BINARY FISSION -cell divides into two equal cells -occurs in bacteria and blue-green algae and paramecia 2. SPORES -groups of cells form inside parent -cells burst out of parent and grow into new organisms -occurs in fungus and ferns
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3. BUDDING -division into two unequal parts -smaller cell will then grow to size of parent -occurs in fungus (yeast) and hydras 4. VEGETATIVE PROPAGATION -part of the parent will break off and grow into a completely new organism -common in plants (spider plants, potatoes)
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Asexual reproduction for growth, repair, and replacement of cells Terms To Know CHROMOSOME: structure that contains the DNA CHROMATIN: thin, stringy form of DNA where the molecule is relaxed and unwound into thread-like fibers
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CENTROMERE: the point where sister chromatids are connected CHROMATID: the tightly wound, visible form of a chromosome SISTER CHROMATIDS: 2 identical chromosomes, the original and its copy Chromosome Structure
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How many chromosomes do we have? 46- (23 pairs)- called the diploid number (2n=46) Where did these come from? Each Pair= 1 from mom & 1 from dad
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Asexual reproduction for growth, repair, and replacement of cells Cells go through a cell cycle Then……… Cells split to form new cells and maintain chromosome number
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BRAINTEASER If each cell has 46 chromosomes, what has to happen each time before a cell divides?
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The Cell Cycle
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Interphase stage of growth / preparation for division lasts about 21 hours DNA in Chromatin form 3 stages: G1, S, G2
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Stages of Interphase G1- period of growth / development S (synthesis) duplicates DNA (chromosomes) –still in chromatin phase G2 duplicates cytoplasm and organelles
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HOW DO CELLS DIVIDE? Answer= MITOSIS
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Mitosis completes the cell cycle Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase Cytokinesis
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Prophase chromosomes become visible chromatids sister chromatids form (seen as X) microtubules form from a spindle at opposite ends of the cells spindle arises from centrioles nuclear envelope disappears
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By the end of prophase… microtubules have attached to centromeres sister chromatids being pulled toward center of cell
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Metaphase microtubules pull chromatids to center chromatids align along the center of cell
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Anaphase Chromosomes split at centromeres microtubules pull apart chromosomes Chromosomes (chromatids) begin migrating to opposite ends of cell
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Telophase Chromatids arrive at poles nuclear envelope reforms around chromatids chromatids unwind into chromatin spindle disintegrates cell membrane begins forming in center
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Cytokinesis cell membrane finishes splitting the cell 2 daughter cells are formed cells will be slightly smaller than parent cell
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TELOPHASE PROPHASE ANAPHASE METAPHASE nucleus cytoplasm one spindle pole one of the condensed chromosomes spindle equator microtubules organized as a spindle apparatus Plant Mitosis INTERPHASE
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Animal Mitosis
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METAPHASEANAPHASETELOPHASE INTERPHASE Fig. 9.5b, p. 153
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Sexual Reproduction Key Facts sex cells are formed – called Gametes (Meiosis) fertilization results in offspring offspring exhibits traits of both parents
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Points of Interest all cells contain 2 of each chromosome- 1 from mom and 1 from dad each of the pair carries identical genes variation exists in the outcome of the genes –example: eye color humans have 46 chromosomes (23 pairs) 22 pairs are called autosomes The 23 rd pair is the sex chromosomes (X and Y) Males= XY Females= XX
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More Terms DIPLOID: the total number of chromosomes a species carries –often abbreviated as 2n –found only in parent cells HAPLOID: half the number of chromosomes for a species –often abbreviated as n –found in sex cells (egg/sperm) formed from meiosis
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HOMOLOGOUS CHROMOSOME: 2 chromosomes which are the same (1 from mom 1 from dad) –Both found in diploid cells –often described as “homologues” GAMETE: the sex cell formed from meiosis –haploid condition –egg or sperm
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MEIOSIS begins with the cell cycle 2 Phases –MEIOSIS I –MEIOSIS II Occurs only in Gonads- testes and ovaries Remember-Mitosis occurs in all other Somatic (body) cells Reduces the number of chromosomes by half
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Interphase a stage of growth and preparation for division of nucleus DNA is in Chromatin form 3 stages: G1, S, G2 the DNA(chromosomes) does double
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MEIOSIS I very similar to Mitosis stages include –Prophase I –Metaphase I –Anaphase I –Telophase I –Interkinesis**
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Prophase I chromatin shortens and thickens into chromatids (sound familiar?) since there are 2 of each chromosome, the 2 homologous chromosomes pair up to form a TETRAD *(does not happen in Mitosis)
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Brain Teaser You are the world’s leading tomato researcher. You have located the gene in a tomato’s DNA that produces lycopene, a natural chemical that helps fight heart disease. The gene is on chromosome 10. If a tomato has a diploid # (2n) of 24, how many tetrads will you have to search through during prophase 1 until you locate chromosome 10?
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Metaphase I the tetrads will align along the center- similar to mitosis Different arrangements can be formed- see example on board
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Anaphase I the tetrads break one of each chromosome and its sister chromatid will remain attached the sisters will migrate toward the poles
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Telophase I cytoplasm will separate as in Mitosis the sisters remain attached at the centromere chromatids do not relax into chromatin
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Interkinesis the DNA is not duplicated this is a period between 2 phases each cell has completed the first division each cell is haploid (n)
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then…MEIOSIS II similar steps occur again except the cell is going to split the sister chromatids into two sets *no Interphase II stages include –Prophase II –Metaphase II –Anaphase II –Telophase II –Cytokinesis
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but... in Anaphase II, the sister chromatids are split apart one of each migrates to opposite poles during Telophase II, the nucleus forms around the chromosomes (chromatids) chromatids relax into chromatin
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Cell Division has finished the “daughter” cells produced are in the haploid condition 1 cell has now produced 4 haploid daughter cells they need to be finished
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Formation of the Egg and Sperm In Females- OOGENESIS - formation of the egg –1 cell makes 4 daughter cells –only 1 daughter becomes the egg –cell division is not equal -3 become POLAR BODIES –all will be haploid
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SPERMATOGENESIS - formation of sperm –1 cell makes 4 equal sized daughter cells –all 4 will be sperm –all will be haploid
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Fertilization is not part of cell division occurs when an egg and sperm meet a ZYGOTE forms from the meeting the zygote is 2n- chromosomal number is restored
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Function of Fertilization produces new offspring introduces mutations for survival increases variation in a population
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Twins 2 Types Identical- always same sex- after being fertilized, zygote splits spontaneously and both begin dividing (MONOZYGOTIC) –Identical DNA Fraternal- 2 eggs are present to be fertilized- can be same or different sexes- appear different because DNA is different (DIZYGOTIC)
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