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Published byIlene Cannon Modified over 9 years ago
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Cellular Reproduction Mitosis
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I) Cell Division in Eukaryotes A) Eukaryotes use Mitosis to produce identical daughter cells by means of Asexual Reproduction B) Eukaryotes use Meiosis to produce a new mix of genes by means of Sexual Reproduction
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II) Interphase (blue arrows) A) G 1 : Gap 1 1) Normal housekeeping 2) Basic cell functions 3) Is usual “stopping point” for cells B) S: Synthesis (copying) of DNA 1) Centrioles copied too C) G 2 : Gap 2 1) Preparation to divide before mitosis begins
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III) M Phase (pink arrow) A) Prophase B) Metaphase C) Anaphase D) Telophase E) Cytokinesis (yellow)
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IV) Mitosis: Early Stages
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A) Prophase: 1)Early: nuclear envelope degrades, chromatin start to condense 2)Late: chromatin thickens (now called chromosomes) & matching chromosome pair-up (sister chromatids) 3)Spindle apparatus forms between the centrioles
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IV) Mitosis: Early Stages B) Metaphase: 1)Spindle fibers attach to chromosomes at centromeres 2)Sister chromatids line up at cell equator
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V) Mitosis: Late Stages
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A) Anaphase: 1)Sister chromatids separate (back into chromosomes) at their centromeres 2)Chromosomes move to the cell’s poles
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V) Mitosis: Late Stages B) Telophase: 1)Nuclear envelope reforms in each daughter cell & chromosomes uncoil back into chromatin. 2) Cytokinesis: separates two new cells by division of the cytoplasm & organelles
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V) Mitosis: Late Stages C) Interphase: 1)Daughter cells are genetically identical to each other and the original parent cell, but they are smaller
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VI) Animal Cell Cytokinesis A) Separation of the two daughter cells by the microtubules & microfilaments of the cytoskeleton
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VII) Plant Cell Division & Cytokinesis A) Spindle forms without centrioles B) Golgi apparatus forms vesicles over the equatorial plate, forming a cell wall while splitting into two cells
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VIII) Controls of Mitosis A) Reasons cells go through mitosis: 1) Growth 2) Repair 3) Replace old cells 4) Asexual reproduction
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X) Cancer A)Cancer cells do not have a properly functioning cell cycle control system 1)They divide excessively & can invade other tissues of the body B)Tumor – abnormal mass of cells 1)Benign tumor – abnormal mass of essentially normal cells 2)Malignant tumor – mass of cancer cells capable of spreading into neighboring tissues C)Metastasis - spread of cancer cells beyond their original site
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X) Cancer A)Cancer cells do not have a properly functioning cell cycle control system 1)They divide excessively & can invade other tissues of the body B)Tumor – abnormal mass of cells 1)Benign tumor – abnormal mass of essentially normal cells 2)Malignant tumor – mass of cancer cells capable of spreading into neighboring tissues C)Metastasis - spread of cancer cells beyond their original site
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XI) Cell Division in Prokaryotes A) Prokaryotes undergo Binary Fission, producing identical daughter cells — type of Asexual Reproduction
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XI) Cell Size A)Most cells are small 1)~1-100 micrometers ( μ m) 2)Nerve cells may be a meter or more in length 3)Most egg cells are large 4)Prokaryotic cells are about 1-10 μ m 5)Eukaryotic cells about 10-100 μ m
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XI) Cell Size B)Cells are limited in size by the ratio between their outer surface area (SA) & their inner volume (V). 1)Need sufficient (SA) to supply the cell with its needs & remove its wastes a)As size increases, (V) increases faster than (SA) 2)Larger the cell, longer it would take substances to reach organelles where they are needed
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