Title: Chapter 10: Cell Growth and Division
1Chapter 10 Cell Growth and Division
- 10-1 Cell Growth
- 10-2 Cell Division
- 10-3 Regulating the Cell Cycle
2Chapter 10 Concept Map pg. 244-249
Gene
Chromatin
Chromosomes
Interphase
Sister Chromatids
Cell Cycle
Mitosis
Centromere
Cyclin
Prophase
Centrioles
Metaphase
Spindle
Anaphase
Cell Plate
Cytokinesis
Telophase
Cleavage Furrow
3Chapter 10 Concept Map pg. 250-252
Results of Mitosis
Tissue
Organ
Organ System
Cancer
Tumor
Types of Skin Cancer
Melanomas
Squamous Cell Carcinoma
Basal Cell Carcinoma
Malignant Melanoma
4Cell Growth
- Cell size limitations
- Surface area to volume ratio The volume of a
cell increases faster than its surface area. - Diffusion becomes inefficient at moving
necessary materials in and out of cell when
volume is too big - DNA makes certain proteins necessary to all
organelles. In a large cell without enough DNA,
these proteins are not produced quickly enough. - Information crisis cell cant meet all of its
needs
5Cell Division
- Chromosomes Condensed clumps of DNA that are
visible right before cell division, they unwind
soon after. - Tightly packed
6Chromosome Structure(like a ball of yarn)
7Cell Division
- The Cell Cycle The cycle of growth and division
of a cell (interphase and mitosis). - See Figure 10-4, pg. 245.
8(No Transcript)
9Cell Division
- Interphase The growth period of a cell.
- 3 Parts
- G1 The cell grows in size and carries on
metabolism (excretion, energy production, making
proteins). - S DNA replicated in preparation for cell
division. - G2 Cell parts needed for cell division are
assembled.
10Cell Division
- Mitosis The phase of the cell cycle when the
cell begins division NO VARIATION - Occurs when cell size is at a maximum.
- Occurs in every cell of your body.
- Four distinct phases, or stages.
- Prophase
- Metaphase
- Anaphase
- Telophase
11Prophase
- First and longest phase of mitosis
- Chromosomes are visible (DNA condenses)
- Each half of a replicated chromosome is called a
sister chromatid. - They are exact copies of each other
- They are connected by a centromere.
- Scientists are often able to identify chromosomes
by the location of the centromere.
12Prophase
- Nucleus and nucleolus dissolve
- They become no longer visible within the cell
- By late prophase, centrioles migrate toward
opposite ends of the cell. - Centrioles Structures made up of microtubules
that aid in separation of sister chromatids. - Spindle fibers many microtubules branching out
from the centrioles. Created to pull apart
sister chromatids. - Plants just have spindle form without the help of
centrioles.
13Prophase
One Chromosome
Spindle Fibers
Chromatid
Centrioles
14Metaphase middle
- Metaphase The centromeres on the sister
chromatids become attached to the spindle fibers.
The chromatids are then lined up in the middle
of the cell. - Each centromere has one spindle fiber on either
side (one for each chromatid). - These fibers come from the centrioles.
15Metaphase
One spindle fiber for each chromatid that makes
up the chromosome
Metaphase in an Onion
All chromosome line up in the middle
16Anaphase away, apart
- Anaphase the sister chromatids are separated
- The centromeres split and the sister chromatids
are pulled apart. - The chromatids are pulled by the spindle fibers
toward the centrioles at the poles of the cell.
17Anaphase
Chromatids are pulled by spindles, and separate
Anaphase in an Onion
18Telophase
- Telophase Phase is characterized by cleavage
furrow, or cell beginning to split its cytoplasm
into two distinct daughter cells. Chromatids are
now far away from each other. - Chromosomes begin to unwind
- Spindle breaks down
- Nucleolus reappears
- Nuclear envelope forms again around chromosomes
19Cytokinesis
- Cytokinesis Cytoplasm of cell divides. Occurs
after telophase. - In a plant cell, a cell plate is laid down to
separate the contents of the two cells. Plasma
membranes form inside these new cell walls that
have been created.
20Telophase leading into cytokinesis
Cell wall formation
Telophase into cytokinesis in an Onion
21I-P-M-A-T
- Interphase
- Prophase
- Metaphase
- Anaphase
- Telophase
22Control of the Cell Cycle
- A series of enzymes (cyclins, etc.) monitor a
cells progress from phase to phase. - Enzyme production is directed by genes
- Too many or too few of these enzymes can disrupt
a normal cell cycle - Also, the wrong enzyme production can disrupt the
cell cycle - Cancer a disrupted cell cycle can result in
excessive cell division
23Control of the Cell Cycle
- Causes of Cancer
- Environmental factors
- Smoking
- Breast, mouth, lung, pancreatic, liver, etc.
- Exposure to sunlight (UV Radiation)
- Basal Cell, Malignant melanoma
- Diet
- Genetic Factors
- Faulty genes
- Viral infections
Basal Cell Carcinoma
http//dermis.multimedica.de/doia/image.asp?zugrd
langecd67nr61diagnr173922
24Types of Skin Cancers
- Basal Cell Carcinoma
- Most common type of skin cancer affecting the
deepest layer of cells of the epidermis. - Squamous Cell Carcinoma
- Second most common type of skin cancer.
- Malignant Melanoma
- Most dangerous type of skin cancer arising from
pigmented areas of the skin. - Incidents of this cancer have increased among
young people due to increased sun exposure.
25ABCDE of Melanoma asymmetry, border, color,
diameter, evolving
http//www.skincancer.org/skin-cancer/melanoma/mel
anoma_2.html
Benign Malignant
Symmetrical Asymetrical
Borders are even Borders are uneven
One shade Two or more shades
Smaller than 1/4 inch Larger than 1/4
26Control of the Cell Cycle
- An interesting fact Where you live is also an
important factor in cancer rates - When you move to a different country, your
chances of getting different kinds of cancer
change to those in your new country. - The possibility of your getting certain cancers
is no longer the same as it was in your original
country - Cancer Growth Website
27Cell Size Limitations Circle Map
Volume increases faster than surface area Cell
doubles in sizeArea increases 4xVolume increase
8x
Large cells without enough DNA cannot produce
proteins fast enough
Surface area to volume
Cell Size Limitations
DNA
Diffusion
Too slow to transport material in a large cell
(BIG volume)
28Control of the Cell Cycle Circle Map
Disrupted cell cycle results in cancer.
Enzyme production directed by genes.
Enzymes monitor the progress of a cell from phase
to phase.
Control of the Cell Cycle
Too many or too few disrupt cell cycle
Wrong enzyme
29Cell Cycle Tree Map
Cell Cycle
Mitosis
Interphase Longest phase of the cell cycleGrowth
phaseCarries out metabolismChromosomes
duplicatedCell parts assembled for cell division
Anaphase Sister chromatids begin to
separatePulled by spindle fibers
Metaphase Chromatids line up at the
equatorAttached to the centromere
Prophase 1st phaseLongest of mitosisChromosomes
visibleNucleus/Nucleolus dissolveCentrioles
migrate to opposite ends of the cellSister
chromatids
Telophase Chromatids at opposite endsCleavage
furrowCell plateTwo daughter cells
formedNucleus and nuclear envelope
reappearCytokinesis
30Causes of Cancer Tree Map
Causes of Cancer
Environmental SmokingSunlightDiet
Genetic Faulty genesViral infections
31Cell Cycle Flow Chart
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)