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How Cells Reproduce

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Mitosis (4 stages) Prophase. Metaphase. Anaphase. Telophase. Mitosis is division of the nucleus ... Meiosis II is like mitosis. The number of. chromosomes is ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How Cells Reproduce


1
How Cells Reproduce
  • Chapter 7

2
DNA Terminology
3
  • Chromatin DNA not condensed into chromosmes.

4
  • Chromosomes DNA condensed into rod like
    structures

5
one chromosome (unduplicated)
one chromosome (duplicated)
6
centromere
one chromatid
its sister chromatid
One chromosome in the duplicated state
Chromatid one half of a chromosome with
duplicated DNA Centromere connection between
sister chromatids of a chromosome
7
The Cell Cycle (3 parts)
1
interphase
3
cytokenesis
cytokinesis
G1
S
2
telophase
mitosis
anaphase
G2
metaphase
prophase
8
Interphase (3 parts)
  • G1 gap phase of cell growth before
    chromosomes duplicate
  • S DNA duplication occurs
  • G2 Cell prepares to divide

9
Mitosis (4 stages)
  • Prophase
  • Metaphase
  • Anaphase
  • Telophase
  • Mitosis is division of the nucleus

10
Roles of Mitosis
  • Multicelled organisms
  • Growth
  • Cell replacement
  • Some protistans, fungi, plants, animals
  • Asexual reproduction

11
Early Prophase Mitosis Starts
  • Duplicated DNA (chromatin) begins to condense
    into chromosomes

12
Late Prophase
  • New microtubules are assembled
  • One centriole pair is moved toward opposite pole
    of spindle
  • Nuclear envelope starts to break up

13
Transition to Metaphase
  • Spindle forms
  • Spindle microtubules become attached to the two
    sister chromatids of each chromosome

14
Metaphase
  • All chromosomes are lined up at the spindle
    equator
  • Chromosomes are maximally condensed

15
Anaphase
  • Sister chromatids of each chromosome are pulled
    apart
  • Microtubules of the spindle shorten moving
    chromosomes to opposite poles of the cell

16
Telophase
  • Chromosomes return to chromatin
  • Two nuclear membranes form, one around each set
    of unduplicated DNA

17
Results of Mitosis
  • Two daughter nuclei
  • Each with same chromosome number as parent cell
  • Chromosomes are in unduplicated form

18
Cytoplasmic Division
  • Usually occurs between late anaphase and end of
    telophase
  • Two mechanisms
  • Cell plate formation (plants)
  • Cleavage (animals)

19
Cytokinesis in Plant Cells
20
Cytokinesis in Animal Cells
Stepped Art
21
Mitosis Maintains Chromosome Number
chromosomes (unduplicated) in parent cell at
interphase
22
Chromosome Number
  • Sum total of chromosomes in a cell
  • Somatic cells (all but sperm and egg)
  • Chromosome number is diploid (2n)
  • Two of each type of chromosome
  • Gametes (sperm and egg)
  • Chromosome number is haploid (n)
  • One of each chromosome type

23
Human Chromosome Number
  • Diploid chromosome number (2n) 46
  • Two sets of 23 chromosomes each
  • One set from father
  • One set from mother
  • Mitosis produces diploid cells from diploid cells

24
Homologous Chromosomes
  • Pairs of chromosomes carrying genetic information
    for the same traits
  • One chromosome in each pair from mother, other
    from father
  • Paternal and maternal chromosomes carry different
    forms of a trait
  • Diploid cells contain homologous pairs

25
Karyotype of a Human Female
26
?????
  • How are cells with the haploid number of
    chromosomes produced?

Meiosis
27
Meiosis Two Divisions
  • Meiosis cuts the number of chromosomes in half
  • Two consecutive nuclear divisions
  • Meiosis I
  • Meiosis II
  • DNA is not duplicated between divisions
  • Four haploid nuclei form

28
Prophase I
  • Each duplicated chromosome pairs with homologue
  • Homologues swap segments
  • Each chromosome becomes attached to spindle

29
Metaphase I
  • Chromosomes are pushed and pulled into the middle
    of cell
  • The spindle is fully formed

30
Anaphase I
  • Homologous chromosomes segregate
  • The sister chromatids remain attached

31
Telophase I
  • The chromosomes arrive at opposite poles
  • Usually followed by cytoplasmic division

32
Prophase II
  • Microtubules attach to the duplicated chromosomes

33
Metaphase II
  • Duplicated chromosomes line up at the spindle
    equator, midway between the poles

34
Anaphase II
  • Sister chromatids separate to become independent
    chromosomes

35
Telophase II
  • The chromosomes arrive at opposite ends of the
    cell
  • A nuclear envelope forms around each set of
    chromosomes
  • Four haploid cells

36
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37
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38
Mitosis
Meiosis I
Meiosis II
39
Mitosis Meiosis Compared
  • Mitosis
  • Functions
  • Asexual reproduction
  • Growth, repair
  • Occurs insomatic cells
  • Produces clones
  • Meiosis
  • Function
  • Sexual reproduction
  • Occurs in germ cells
  • Produces variable offspring

40
How Meiosis Puts Variation in Traits
41
Crossing Over
  • Each chromosome becomes zippered to its homologue
  • All four chromatids are closely aligned
  • Chromatids of different chromosomes exchange
    segments

42
Effect of Crossing Over
  • After crossing over, each chromosome contains
    both maternal and paternal segments
  • Creates new allele combinations in offspring

43
Random Alignment
  • During transition between prophase I and
    metaphase I, chromosomes attach to microtubules
    of the spindle
  • Initial contacts between microtubules and
    chromosomes are random producing different
    combinations of chromosomes in gametes

44
Possible ChromosomeCombinations
1
2
3
or
or
or
45
Fertilization Also Creates Variation
  • Male and female gametes uniteand nuclei fuse
  • Fusion of two haploid nuclei produces diploid
    nucleus in the zygote
  • Which of the two gametes unite is random
  • Adds to variation among offspring

46
Factors Contributing to Variation among Offspring
  • Crossing over during prophase I
  • Random alignment of chromosomes at metaphase I
  • Random combination of gametes at fertilization

47
The Cell Cycle and Cancer
48
Cancer Characteristics
  • Cells grow and divide abnormally
  • Plasma membrane and cytoplasm altered
  • Weakened capacity for adhesion cells can move to
    new tissues
  • Cells loose their specilization

49
The End
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