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Mitosis

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Title: Mitosis


1
Mitosis
  • Chapter 9
  • (Starr Taggart 2003)

2
Overview of Division Mechanisms
  • Mitosis and meiosis are both nuclear division
    mechanisms.
  • Both sort and package parental DNA into new
    nuclei for daughter cells.
  • Mitosis used for growth, cell replacement, and
    tissue repair. Occurs in somatic cells.
  • Meiosis occurs in germ cells set aside for gamete
    production and sexual reproduction.

3
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4
Chromosomes
  • Chromosome DNA molecule with attached proteins
  • Chromosomes duplicate before mitosis.
  • As long as duplicated halves are attached they
    are called sister chromatids.
  • Centromere is area with attachment sites for
    microtubules that will move chromosomes during
    division

Figure 9.2
5
Mitosis and Chromosome Number
  • Chromosome number the sum total of chromosomes
    of a given type
  • Diploid condition in which a cell has two copies
    of each type of chromosome
  • Mitosis keeps chromosome number constant,
    division after division, from one generation to
    the next.
  • If a parent is diploid, then the daughter cells
    will be diploid as well.

6
Mitosis is only one phase of the cell cycle.
7
Overview of mitosis in cell of African blood lily
cell,Haemanthus. Spindle apparatus (two sets of
microtubules) moves the chromosomes.
8
Animal Cell
Interphase cells duplicates its DNA and readies
for division
9
Animal Cell
Early Prophase DNA and proteins start to
condense (purple-maternally inherited
blue-paternally inherited)
10
Animal Cell
Late Prophase More condensing new microtubules
become assembled and move the two centrioles to
opposite ends of the cell nuclear envelope
starts to break up
11
Animal Cell
Prometaphase New microtubules penetrate the
nuclear region to form a bipolar spindle
apparatus. Many microtubules become attached to
sister chromatids. Nuclear envelope breaks up
into tiny vesicles.
12
Animal Cell
Metaphase all chromosomes have lined up at the
spindle equator they are their most condensed
during this phase
13
Animal Cell
Anaphase attachments between sister chromatids
break microtubules move the two separate
chromosomes to opposite poles as the spindle
apparatus contracts
14
Animal Cell
Telophase two clusters of chromosomes
decondense patches of new membrane fuse to form
new nuclear envelope mitosis completed
15
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16
cell wall
former
spindle
equator
light
micrograph
and transmission electron
micrograph
showing cell plate formation in a dividing plant
cell
vesicles
cell plate cellulose deposited between
new membranes
converging with wall precursers two new
membranes elongate
Fig. 9.6, p. 154
Slide 8
Cytoplasmic division (cytokinesis) for plants
involves cell plate formation
17
Cytoplasmic division (cytokinesis) for animals
involves cytoplasmic pinching with indentation
called a cleavage furrow
18
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19
The Wonder of Interphase PRECISION
20
Organization of Metaphase Chromosomes
  • Histones proteins associated with DNA act as
    DNA spools
  • Nucleosome DNA-histone spool
  • Interactions between histones and DNA make
    chromosomes coil on itself repeatedly during
    mitosis (condensation)
  • After condensation is nearly complete, sister
    chromatids has one constricted region called
    centromere
  • Structure at centromere surface (kinetochore)
    where microtubles will attach

21
Organization of Metaphase Chromosomes
Why dont the strands tangle? An enzyme called
DNA topoisomerase
22
How does the distance between the microtubules
and the spindle poles change? Mechanism
(1) As a kinetochore slides over a microtubule,
it shortens by disassembling.
23
How does the distance between the microtubules
and the spindle poles change? Mechanism
(2) As overlapping microtubules rachet past each
other, they move the spindle poles apart and
thereby increase the distance between the sister
chromatids of each chromosome.
24
Cancer
  • What controls the cell cycle (repeated pattern of
    growth, genetic duplication, and division)?
  • What causes unrestrained growth or division of
    cells (i.e. cancer)?
  • Genetics can play a large role.

25
Unrestrained cell division
  • Mechanisms that induce cell division can be come
    hyperactive (analogous to a stuck accelerator).
  • Mechanisms that suppress cell division fail
    (analogous to failed brakes)

26
Mechanism 1 Oncogenes
  • Oncogene mutated gene that is associated with
    cancer and uncontrolled cell growth prompts
    excessive cell division

proto-oncogene (normal)
mutation
Example point mutation from G to C in ras-gene
on chromosome 11 associated with bladder cancer
oncogene
27
Mechanism 2 Tumor Suppressor Genes
  • Tumor suppressor genes normal gene that inhibits
    growth faulty tumor suppressor genes fail to
    turn off cell division
  • Mutation of p53 gene on chromosome 17 associated
    with 50 of human cancers
  • Normally prevents division of cells with damaged
    DNA
  • Rb gene on chromosome 13 suppresses cancer in
    dominant form
  • Mutation in both parental copies can cause
    retinoblastoma

28
Characteristics of Cancer Cells
  • Plasma membrane and cytoplasm dramatically
    altered.
  • Membrane becomes more permeable and prone to
    leaking.
  • Cytoskeleton becomes disorganized, shrinks, or
    both
  • Cancer cells grow and divide abnormally.
  • Cancer cells have weaker capacity for adhesion
  • Cancer cells are lethal.

29
Therapy
  • Surgery
  • Radiation therapy the use of radioisotopes
    (atoms with an uneven number of protons and
    electrons) to destroy or impair activity of
    targets cells examples include emissions of
    radium 226 and cobalt 60
  • Chemotherapy the use of drugs to destroy cancer
    cells
  • Gene therapy modification of genetic material of
    living cells to fight disease substitution of a
    working gene for a defective one (p53) or
    inserting a gene making cells more susceptible to
    chemo
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