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Mitosis

Why do cells divide?

One called organisms

  1. For asexual reproduction

Multi-celled organisms

  1. For growth and development

    • from fertilization to adult

  2. For repair and replacement

    • Replace cells or repair an injury

Asexual Cell Division

  • cells reproduce to for genetically identical daughter cells

  • Exact copy

Prokaryotic Cell Division

  • Binary fission

  • Steps of binary fission

    1. Cell copies its DNA

    2. Cell grows

    3. Cell splits into two

Eukaryotic Cell Division

  • the cell cycle

    1. Interphase (G1, S, and G2 phases)

    2. M phase (mitosis)

    3. Cytokinesis

Interphase (time between mitosis)

  • Cell spends 90% of its life in interphase

  • G1: growth 1

    • Cell growth

    • Some cells never leave (living normally on its own

  • S: synthesis

    • DNA is copied

    • Only cells that know they are going to divide

  • G2: growth 2

    • Cell growth

    • Preparation

    • Makes sure there is enough of everything for 2 cells

DNA Terms

  • Chromatin- unwound in the nucleus

  • Chromosome:

    • Sister chromatids- 2 identical halves of a chromosome

    • Centromere- central region holding together 2 chromatids

Mitotic Phase

  • After interphase

  • 4 phases

    1. prophase (set up)

    2. Metaphase

    3. Anaphase

    4. Telophase (clean up)

Prophase

  • Nucleus breaks down

  • Chromatin condenses into chromosomes

  • Spindle fibers begin to form in cytoplasm

  • Centrosomes (centrioles) move away from each other

Metaphase

  • Centrosomes are at opposite poles

  • Chromosomes line up on metaphase plate

  • Mitotic spindle (made of spindle fibers) is fully formed

Anaphase

  • Sister chromatids separate at centromere

  • Chromatids move towards opposite poles (pulled by spindle fibers)

Telophase

  • Nucleus begins to form in each new cell

  • Nuclear envelopes reform

  • Chromosomes unwind to become chromatin

Cytokineses

  • Division of cytoplasm

  • Happens with telophase

  • Animal cells:

    • Cleavage furrow forms

    • Pinches the cell into 2

  • Plant cells:

    • Cell plate forms

    • Divides the cell in 2

Controlling Cell Division

  • Internal factors

    • Regulatory proteins

  • External factors

    • Growth factors

    • Density of cells

      • If cells become too dense in the area, they will stop dividing

    • Anchorage dependence

      • Some cells must be anchored to a specific surface

Cancer

  • Tumor:

    • A mass of cells within an otherwise normal tissue

  • Benign tumor

    • Considered non-cancerous cells

  • Malignant tumor

    • Cancerous

    • Can be invasive and impure the function of one or more organs

  • Metastasis

    • The spread of cancer cells beyond their original site

    1. A tumor grows from a singular cancer cell

    2. Cancer cells invade neighboring tissue

    3. Cancer cells spread through lymph and blood vessels to other parts of the body

Cell Differentiation

  • the process by which cells become specialized

    • Stem cells receive signals

      • unspecialized cells that can give rise to one or more types of specialized cells

      • Cord blood, embryonic cells, adult stem cells, bone marrow

      • Totipotent cells- each cell can develop into a new individual (cells of an embryo 1-3 days)

      • Pluripotent cells- each cell can form any cell type (cells of blastocyst 5-14 days)

      • Multipotent- cells differentiate and can form a number of tissue types (adult stem cells and bone marrow)

IC

Mitosis

Why do cells divide?

One called organisms

  1. For asexual reproduction

Multi-celled organisms

  1. For growth and development

    • from fertilization to adult

  2. For repair and replacement

    • Replace cells or repair an injury

Asexual Cell Division

  • cells reproduce to for genetically identical daughter cells

  • Exact copy

Prokaryotic Cell Division

  • Binary fission

  • Steps of binary fission

    1. Cell copies its DNA

    2. Cell grows

    3. Cell splits into two

Eukaryotic Cell Division

  • the cell cycle

    1. Interphase (G1, S, and G2 phases)

    2. M phase (mitosis)

    3. Cytokinesis

Interphase (time between mitosis)

  • Cell spends 90% of its life in interphase

  • G1: growth 1

    • Cell growth

    • Some cells never leave (living normally on its own

  • S: synthesis

    • DNA is copied

    • Only cells that know they are going to divide

  • G2: growth 2

    • Cell growth

    • Preparation

    • Makes sure there is enough of everything for 2 cells

DNA Terms

  • Chromatin- unwound in the nucleus

  • Chromosome:

    • Sister chromatids- 2 identical halves of a chromosome

    • Centromere- central region holding together 2 chromatids

Mitotic Phase

  • After interphase

  • 4 phases

    1. prophase (set up)

    2. Metaphase

    3. Anaphase

    4. Telophase (clean up)

Prophase

  • Nucleus breaks down

  • Chromatin condenses into chromosomes

  • Spindle fibers begin to form in cytoplasm

  • Centrosomes (centrioles) move away from each other

Metaphase

  • Centrosomes are at opposite poles

  • Chromosomes line up on metaphase plate

  • Mitotic spindle (made of spindle fibers) is fully formed

Anaphase

  • Sister chromatids separate at centromere

  • Chromatids move towards opposite poles (pulled by spindle fibers)

Telophase

  • Nucleus begins to form in each new cell

  • Nuclear envelopes reform

  • Chromosomes unwind to become chromatin

Cytokineses

  • Division of cytoplasm

  • Happens with telophase

  • Animal cells:

    • Cleavage furrow forms

    • Pinches the cell into 2

  • Plant cells:

    • Cell plate forms

    • Divides the cell in 2

Controlling Cell Division

  • Internal factors

    • Regulatory proteins

  • External factors

    • Growth factors

    • Density of cells

      • If cells become too dense in the area, they will stop dividing

    • Anchorage dependence

      • Some cells must be anchored to a specific surface

Cancer

  • Tumor:

    • A mass of cells within an otherwise normal tissue

  • Benign tumor

    • Considered non-cancerous cells

  • Malignant tumor

    • Cancerous

    • Can be invasive and impure the function of one or more organs

  • Metastasis

    • The spread of cancer cells beyond their original site

    1. A tumor grows from a singular cancer cell

    2. Cancer cells invade neighboring tissue

    3. Cancer cells spread through lymph and blood vessels to other parts of the body

Cell Differentiation

  • the process by which cells become specialized

    • Stem cells receive signals

      • unspecialized cells that can give rise to one or more types of specialized cells

      • Cord blood, embryonic cells, adult stem cells, bone marrow

      • Totipotent cells- each cell can develop into a new individual (cells of an embryo 1-3 days)

      • Pluripotent cells- each cell can form any cell type (cells of blastocyst 5-14 days)

      • Multipotent- cells differentiate and can form a number of tissue types (adult stem cells and bone marrow)