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Cell Cycle, Mitosis, & Regulation Chapter 12
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Slide 2 of 36 Genome
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Slide 3 of 36 Kinetochore – protein attaches to chromosome at centromere + attaches to mitotic spindle
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Slide 4 of 36 Haploid –Set of unique chromosomes Only in gametes Sperm + Egg Diploid – 2 sets of the unique chromosomes 1 set from Mom 1 set from Dad ALL cells but gametes Somatic Cells 2,700 base pairs OR 2.7 kbp (MIT – D. Gifford [7.90J]) What percent of chromosomal DNA = genes?
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Slide 8 of 36 “-omes” Genome – Complete set of genetic information Transcriptome – set of all the mRNA produced by a cell or an organism Proteome – entire set of proteins coded for by the genome of a cell or an organism How many chromosomes in human genome? Which is larger, genome or transcriptome?
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Slide 9 of 36 Central Dogma of Molecular Biology DNA RNA Protein HIV (Reverse Transcriptase) cDNA (Complementary DNA library) Prions – infectious proteins Genome Transcriptome Proteome
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Slide 10 of 36 Divisions Prokaryotes = binary fission Eukaryotes Mitosis ALL cells arise by mitosis EXCEPT zygote (original cell) Meiosis ONLY used to produce egg (oocyte) and sperm (spermatocytes)
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Slide 11 of 36 This is NOT mitosis!! Proks do NOT do mitosis
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Slide 12 of 36 Mitosis Occurs in which type of cells? Occurs where in the body? Genetically identical (Clone) Produces diploid daughter cells Produces clones Somatic cells
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Slide 13 of 36 Meiosis Occurs in which type of cells? Occurs where in the body? Genetically different Produces haploid daughter cells Produces eggs or sperm Produces Gametes
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Slide 15 of 36 Questions? Which is more common mitosis or meiosis? What is the main way that prokaryote chromosomes differ eukaryotic chromosomes? Binary fission or mitosis? Fungi E. Coli Plants What percent of DNA is non-coding in humans?
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Slide 16 of 36 Questions? (Page 2) What is the genome? What is larger proteome or genome? Haploid or Diploid? Red Blood Cell Muscle Cell Sperm Neuron Macrophage CD4 T-Cell
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Slide 17 of 36 Cell Cycle “Life of a cell” From time it is first formed until it divides into 2 daughter cells
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Slide 20 of 36 Notes on Cell Cycle G1 – Cell growth Cells do their cell things Vast majority of time in the cell cycle Human cell = 46 chromosomes S – Chromosomal duplication Human cell = 46*2 = 92 chromosomes Cells still grow during this time G2 – Second Gap Brief period between S and Mitosis Mitosis / Cytokinesis
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Slide 21 of 36 Watch Videos Overview.swf Mitosis.mpg The_Stages_of_Mitosis_HD.mp4
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Slide 26 of 36 Cytokinesis Cytokinesis – Cytoplasmic (and contents) division Cytokinesis Video? During telophase G1 Animal cells Cleavage furrow divides the cytoplasm into 2 cells Plant cells Cell plate forms that divides the cytoplasm
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Slide 27 of 36 Cell Cycle Control Some cells divide Continuously (skin cells) Occasionally (liver cells) Never (CNS cells & muscle cells) Signals to divide are present in cytoplasm These signals control the rate of cell division Result of signal transduction pathways
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Slide 28 of 36 Cell Cycle Regulation Involves checkpoints There are 3 checkpoints: G 1, G 2, and M G 1 checkpoint - Most important G 0 – nondividing phase Most body cells Neurons & Muscle cells
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Slide 29 of 36 Kinase – protein enzymes that control cell cycle Cyclins – proteins that bind to kinases and activate them CdK – cyclin-dependent kinase Activated kinases give the Go-ahead signal at the checkpoints
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Slide 31 of 36 Questions? What are the phases of the cell cycle? What are the parts of interphase? What are the parts of mitosis? What happens during the S-phase?
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Slide 32 of 36 Questions (Page 2) What is a CdK? What is the G 0 phase? How is cytokinesis different in animal cells from plant cells? When does cytokinesis occur in the cell cycle? How does a kinetochore differ from a centromere?
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Slide 33 of 36 Normal Cells Controlled cell cycle Density-dependent Inhibition - Too many cells = no division - Once a cell contacts another cell, division ceases - Contact Inhibition Anchorage Dependence - Division only happens when cell is attached to a substrate - If attached to another cell, no division
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Slide 34 of 36 Cancerous Cells Do NOT adhere to normal cell signals Divide excessively Violate density-dependent inhibition & anchorage dependency Considered “immortal cells” Normal cells undergo a process of genetic alteration that affects cell cycle regulation Called Transformation
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Slide 35 of 36 Tumor Terms Tumor = mass of abnormal cells Abnormal because? Benign tumor abnormal cells that remain at the original site Malignant tumor abnormal cells that impair functions of one or more organs
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Slide 36 of 36 Cancer is characterized by … Malignant tumors are characterized by anaplasia, invasiveness, & metastasis Anaplasia Cells do not undergo differentiation Invasiveness Intrusion of cells into and destruction of surrounding tissues Metastasis Spread of neoplasms via blood vessels to distant tissues or organs
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