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Chromosomes and Cell Cycle Cell Division Cell Cycle Mitosis Cytokinesis

Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

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Chromosomes and Cell Cycle. Cell Division Cell Cycle Mitosis Cytokinesis. Cell Basics. There are trillions of cells in your body. Cells are microscopic Cells have DNA inside a structure called the nucleus The nucleus is “surrounded” by a structure called the nuclear envelope - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Cell DivisionCell CycleMitosis

Cytokinesis

Page 2: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Cell Basics• There are trillions of cells in your body.• Cells are microscopic• Cells have DNA inside a structure called

the nucleus• The nucleus is “surrounded” by a structure

called the nuclear envelope• Cells are filled with a jelly like substance

called the cytoplasm

Page 3: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Nucleus

DNA

Cytoplasm

A Cell Nuclear Envelope

Page 4: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Cell Division• Cell division is the splitting of a single

cell into two daughter cells that are identical to each other – mitosis – process of nuclear division

(dividing the nucleus)– cytokinesis - process of division of the

cytoplasm

Page 5: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Cell DivisionCells divide because the organism needs to:

– Grow- our cells don’t get bigger in size, they get bigger in number

– Repair- needed because of worn out or injured cells (your skin cells are replaced every 28 days; your stomach every 7)

– Reproduce:• asexual – one parent; offspring

identical to parent – mitosis or binary fission

• sexual – combination of genetic material from two parents – meiosis (more on this later!)

Page 6: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Asexual

• asexual reproduction– binary fission

Page 7: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Asexual

• asexual reproduction– mitosis

Page 8: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

The Cell CycleCell Cycle- • occurs in somatic cells

– What are somatic cells?• a set of events that results in two new

daughter cells, which then start the process again.– Interphase

• G1 S G2– Prophase– Metaphase– Anaphase– Telophase– Cytokinesis

Growth and Preparation- 90% of the time spent here

Mitosis- division of the nucleus

Division of the cytoplasm

Page 9: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

The Cell Cycle

Interphase– 90% of the time, the cell is in this phase– the cell grows – performs operations unique to the type of cell

(stomach cells make digestive enzymes, some white blood cells make antibodies, etc)

Three stages of interphase:- G1 (growth stage 1)- S (synthesis)- G2 (growth stage 2)

Page 10: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

The Cell Cycle• GROWTH 1 STAGE – G1

– decides whether or not the cell will divide– makes its structural proteins and enzymes

to perform its functions• a pancreas cell will produce and secrete

insulin• salivary gland cells will produce and

secrete enzymes in the mouth to aid in digestion

Page 11: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle
Page 12: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

The Cell CycleS Synthesis (DNA Replication)–each of the

chromosomes is copied

Page 13: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

The Cell CycleGROWTH 2 PHASE – G2

– DNA replication is checked by DNA repair enzymes– cell prepares for mitosis– proteins organize themselves to form a series of

fibers called the spindle

Page 14: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

DNA correctly replicated?All proteins built for cell division?

Page 15: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

INTERPHASE IN AN ANIMAL CELL

INTERPHASE IN A PLANT CELLNote that the DNA is in the form of chromatin – loose and in long strands.The nucleolus is usually visible during interphase, but not during mitosis

Page 16: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Mitosis• Follows interphase when the cell is ready

to divide• 4 main parts

– prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase– P-MAT

Page 17: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

PROPHASE

METAPHASE

ANAPHASE

TELOPHASE

Page 18: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

MITOSIS

• PROPHASE– condensing of 2 sister chromatids

• chromatin coils up• chromosomes become visible

– centrioles replicate and begin to move to opposite sides of the cell

– nuclear envelope (the outside of the nucleus) disappears

Page 19: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Notice that the chromatin begins to coil up and you see “space” in the nucleus between what will soon be evident as separate chromosomes

Page 20: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

MITOSIS

• METAPHASE–spindle fibers move the chromosomes

to the middle– this organization helps to ensure that in

the next phase, when the chromosomes are separated, each new nucleus will receive one copy of each chromosome

Page 21: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Chromosomes in metaphase have their centromeres lined up in the middle and their long arms are trailing from each side. Some students think it looks like Chinese characters, others have compared it to stitches on a zombie mouth.

Page 22: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

MITOSIS

• ANAPHASE–each chromosome is attached to a

spindle which moves it toward one pole–chromatids move apart from one

another– results in equal separation and

distribution of chromosomes

Page 23: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

In anaphase the centromeres are in rows at each end of the cell and the arms of the chromosomes are trailing away toward the middle of the cellSome students think this looks like a scary zombie mouth opening

Page 24: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

MITOSIS

• TELOPHASE– newly separated chromatids arrive at opposite

ends of cell– nuclear envelope reappears around the daughter

nuclei– the chromosomes uncoil and are no longer

visible– cytokinesis may also begin during this stage– this phase is opposite of prophase in the events

that happen– end with two new nuclei (one for each new cell)

Page 25: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

In telophase the 2 new cells are preparing to enter interphaseThe chromosomes uncoilIn this picture you can see the cell wall forming between the two “wads” of chromatinThis is called a cell plate until it reaches both sides of the old cell and divides it into 2 new cells

Page 26: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Tissue sample showing cells in multiple phases of mitosis

Page 27: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

CYTOKINESIS• Process in which the

cytoplasm divides and two separate cells (daughter cells) form

• In animals, it begins with the formation of a cleavage furrow

• In plants, a cell wall forms

Page 28: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Animal cell cleavagePlant cell plate

Page 29: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Challenge!

• What differences do you see between animal cell division and plant cell division?

(Hint: does one type of cell have something the other doesn’t?)

1.

2.

3.

Page 30: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Challenge!• Shape

– animal cells are round– plant cells are square

• Structures– animal cells have

structures called centrioles

– plant cells do not

• Telophase– a cleavage furrow

divides animal cells– a cell plate divides plant

cells

Page 31: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Can you identify the phase each cell is in?

Page 32: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

MITOSIS—Summary PROPHASE- chromosomes visible (P for

Phat), nuclear membrane disappearing chromosomes condense/fatten and become visible)

METAPHASE- sister chromatids lined up in the middle/equator (M for middle, chromosomes lined up in the middle of cell)

Page 33: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

ANAPHASE- sister chromatids pulled apart (A for Apart or Away because the chromatids pull apart and move away from center)

TELOPHASE- chromosomes are at ends of cell, cells prepare to separate (T for Two new nuclear envelopes are forming)

Cleavage furrow

Cell plate

Page 34: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Not all cells reproduce…

• some leave the cell cycle here and do not undergo cell division– red blood cells – which “kick

out” their nucleus to make room for the hemoglobin and therefore can’t divide

–brain and spinal cord cells – rarely if ever divide; called G0 (pronounced G naught)

Page 35: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle
Page 37: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

Abnormal Cell Cycle: CancerWhat causes cancer?• Cancer is caused by mutations (changes) in

the DNA, including the genes that regulate the cell cycle

• Basically:– uncontrolled cell growth

• cancer cells grow and divide as long as they receive nutrients

• cancer cells crowd normal cells causing tissues and organs to stop working

Page 38: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle
Page 39: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle
Page 40: Chromosomes and Cell Cycle

• Environmental factors can increase the risk of cancer.

• Substances that are known to cause cancer are called carcinogens(kar SIH nuh junz). – Tobacco, tobacco smoke, and alcohol, are examples of

carcinogens

• Some viruses are linked to cancer– HPV (human papilloma virus) can lead to cervical cancer as

well as other forms of cancer

• Mutagens cause mutations, which can lead to cancer. – Radiation (x-rays, UV light) is a mutagen. So are some

chemicals.