chapter 12the cell cycle a ppt by mrs. morton at buffalo acadamy of the sacred heart and andrea wise...
TRANSCRIPT
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Chapter 12 The Cell CycleA PPT by Mrs. Morton at Buffalo Acadamy of the Sacred Heart and Andrea Wise of Providence HS
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Bacterial Cells
Binary Fission Circular DNA replicates Cell divides
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The Cell Cycle
Interphase (90% of cycle)
• G1 phase growth • S phase synthesis of DNA
(Replication)• G2 phase preparation for
cell division Mitotic phase • Mitosis nuclear division • Cytokinesis cytoplasm
division
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Cell Division: Key Roles Genome: cell’s genetic
information Somatic (body cells) cells Gametes (reproductive cells):
sperm and egg cells Chromosomes: DNA molecules Diploid (2n): 2 sets of
chromosomes Haploid (1n): 1 set of
chromosomes Chromatin: uncoiled DNA-
protein complex Chromatids: replicated strands
of a chromosome Centromere: narrowing
“waist” of sister chromatids Mitosis: nuclear division Cytokinesis: cytoplasm
division Meiosis: gamete nuclear
division
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Chromosomes
Contain genetic information. Made of DNA.
Numbers of chromosomes per cell Humans--46 Total (23 from each parent) Fruit fly- 8 total Chicken--78
The # of chromosomes is not correlated with the complexity of the organism
Chromosomes
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MITOSIS
DEFINITION Division of the Cell’s Nucleus
PURPOSE To ensure that each daughter cell
gets an exact copy of the chromosomes
Mitosis
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Why cells must divide... List 3 reasons why cells must divide.
1 Growth of organism While each cell remains tiny
2 Repair
3 Reproduce (Mitosis-Asexual, Meiosis Sexual)
Why Cells Must Divide
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Mitosis Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase
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Prophase Chromosomes
visible Nucleoli
disappear Sister chromatids Mitotic spindle
forms Centrioles move
to opposite poles
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Metaphase Centrioles are at
opposite poles Centromeres are
aligned Kinetochores of
sister chromatids attached to microtubules (spindle)
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Anaphase Paired centromeres
separate; sister chromatids liberated
Chromosomes move to opposite poles
Each pole now has a complete set of chromosomes
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Telophase Daughter nuclei
form Nuclear
envelopes arise Chromatin
becomes less coiled
Two new nuclei complete mitosis
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Cytokinesis
Cytoplasmic division
Animals: cleavage furrow
Plants: cell plate
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Cell Cycle regulation Cell cycle
control system Checkpoints Cyclin- cell
division protein Levels of cyclins
rise and fall depending on the cycle and cellular conditions
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Cell Cycle regulation Growth factors
Mitosis promoting factor (MPF)- a cyclin
Platelet Dervived GF Grow blood vessels
to new tissues Density-dependent
inhibition Anchorage
dependence
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Cyclins Regulate Cell Cycle
MPF -Mitosis Promoting Factor Contains the enzyme CDK- Cyclin-
Dependent Kinase
Kinase transfers phosphate from ATP to protein (energizes a molecule needed for cell division).
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Growth Factors G1 Checkpoint (G1/S): External Growth
Factors Platelet Derived GF (PDGF)- stimulates cell
division near a wound G2 Checkpoint (G2/ M)
Checks the DNA for damage
M -spindle checkpoint (before anaphase) Checks for correct mitosis and that the
spindle is correctly anchored to kinetichore
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Cancer Transformation of DNA Tumor: benign or malignant Metastasis
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Cancer: breast cancer cell & mammogram
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Cancer NIH Animations
NIH Cancer Resources Cancer is Caused by a Combination
of Genetic Mutations Proto-oncogene- Healthy cell division
gene Becomes oncogene- mutated form
Tumor Suppressor Gene p53 is a well-known tumor suppressor gene
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What phase is this?
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What phase is this?
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Figure 13.8a
Prophase I Metaphase I Anaphase I Telophase I andCytokinesis
Centrosome(with centriole pair)
Sisterchromatids
Chiasmata
Spindle
Homologouschromosomes
Fragmentsof nuclearenvelope
Duplicated homologouschromosomes (red and blue)pair and exchange segments;2n 6 in this example.
Centromere(with kinetochore)
Metaphaseplate
Microtubuleattached tokinetochore
Chromosomes line upby homologous pairs.
Sister chromatidsremain attached
Homologouschromosomesseparate
Each pair of homologous chromosomes separates.
Cleavagefurrow
Two haploid cells form; each chromosomestill consists of two sister chromatids.
MEIOSIS I
DRAW AND LABEL
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Figure 13.8b
Prophase II Metaphase II Anaphase II Telophase II andCytokinesis
Sister chromatidsseparate
Haploid daughtercells forming
During another round of cell division, the sister chromatids finally separate;four haploid daughter cells result, containing unduplicated chromosomes.
MEIOSIS II
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Diploidgerm-linecell
Haploid gametes
Chromosomeduplication
Meiosis I
Meiosis II
HomologueHomologue
Centromere
Sisterchromatids
Synapsis:homologuescloselyassociated,and crossingover canoccur
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Figure 13.9
Prophase
Duplicatedchromosome
MITOSIS
Chromosomeduplication
Parent cell
2n 6
Metaphase
AnaphaseTelophase
2n 2n
Daughter cellsof mitosis
MEIOSIS
MEIOSIS I
MEIOSIS II
Prophase I
Metaphase I
Anaphase ITelophase I
Haploidn 3
Chiasma
Chromosomeduplication Homologous
chromosome pair
Daughter cells of
meiosis I
Daughter cells of meiosis IIn n n n
SUMMARY
Property Mitosis Meiosis
DNAreplication
Number ofdivisions
Synapsis ofhomologouschromosomes
Number of daughter cellsand geneticcomposition
Role in the animal body
Occurs during interphase beforemitosis begins
One, including prophase, metaphase,anaphase, and telophase
Does not occur
Two, each diploid (2n) and geneticallyidentical to the parent cell
Enables multicellular adult to arise fromzygote; produces cells for growth, repair,and, in some species, asexual reproduction
Occurs during interphase before meiosis I begins
Two, each including prophase, metaphase, anaphase,and telophase
Occurs during prophase I along with crossing overbetween nonsister chromatids; resulting chiasmatahold pairs together due to sister chromatid cohesion
Four, each haploid (n), containing half as manychromosomes as the parent cell; genetically differentfrom the parent cell and from each other
Produces gametes; reduces number of chromosomesby half and introduces genetic variability among the gametes
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Fig. 12.8(TE Art)
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Metaphase I
Anaphase I
Meiosis I
Chiasmata
Mitosis
Metaphase
Anaphase
Homologues do not pair; kinetochores of sister chromatids remain separate; microtubules attach to both kinetochores on opposite sides of the centromere.
Microtubules pull sisterchromatids apart.
Chiasmata hold homologues together. The kinetochores of sister chromatids fuse and function as one. Microtubules can attach to only one side of each centromere.
Microtubules pull thehomologous chromosomes
apart, but sisterchromatids areheld together.
Fig. 12.9(TE Art)
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Count cells in the zone of cell division
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C C
E e
KARYTYPE
CROSSING OVER- RECOMBINATION FREQUENCY
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Yellow body color
White eye color
Vermilion eye color
Miniature wing
Rudimentary wing
y
y
w
w
v
vm
mr
r
Five characters onX chromosome
0 .01 .31 .34 .58
Wild type
Fig. 13.32(TE Art)
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Duchenne muscular dystrophyBecker muscular dystrophy
Ichthyosis, X-linkedPlacental steroid sulfatase deficiencyKallmann syndromeChondrodysplasia punctata, X-linked recessive
HypophosphatemiaAicardi syndromeHypomagnesemia, X-linkedOcular albinismRetinoschisis
Adrenal hypoplasiaGlycerol kinase deficiency
Incontinentia pigmentiWiskott-Aldrich syndromeMenkes syndrome
Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathyChoroideremiaCleft palate, X-linkedSpastic paraplegia, X-linked, uncomplicatedDeafness with stapes fixationPRPS-related gout
Lowe syndrome
Lesch-Nyhan syndromeHPRT-related goutHunter syndromeHemophilia BHemophilia AG6PD deficiency: favismDrug-sensitive anemiaChronic hemolytic anemiaManic-depressive illness, X-linkedColorblindness, (several forms)Dyskeratosis congenitaTKCR syndromeAdrenoleukodystrophyAdrenomyeloneuropathyEmery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophyDiabetes insipidus, renalMyotubular myopathy, X-linked
Androgen insensitivity
Chronic granulomatous diseaseRetinitis pigmentosa-3
Norrie diseaseRetinitis pigmentosa-2
Sideroblastic anemiaAarskog-Scott syndrome
PGK deficiency hemolytic anemia
Anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia
AgammaglobulinemiaKennedy disease
Pelizaeus-Merzbacher diseaseAlport syndrome
Fabry disease
Albinism-deafness syndrome
Fragile-X syndrome
Immunodeficiency, X-linked,with hyper IgM
Lymphoproliferative syndrome
Ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency
Human X chromosome
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