Title: Cell Division
1Cell Division
- Multicellular organisms
- Important in growth and development
- Single celled organisms
- Important for reproduction
- Goals
- To create 2 identical daughter cells
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4Genetic Material Equally Distributed
- What has to occur in order for genetic material
to be equally distributed? - Each new cells contains the total number of
chromosomes as the parent cell - DNA has to replicate
- Before we talk about replication we need to
understand more about DNA
5The Structure of DNA
- Double Helix
- Sugar Phosphate Backbone
- Made of nucleotides
6p
NUCLEOTIDES
base
base
sugar
sugar
p
p
base
base
sugar
sugar
p
Bases Guanine Cytosine Thymine - Adenine
7Helicase binds to the DNA molecule Causing the
DNA helix to break apart
REPLICATION
8DNA Polymerase binds to the DNA strands
Once DNA Polymerase reaches the end of the
strand it moves back to the top.
9DNA polymerase assembles nucleotides The new DNA
strands grow in length
DNA polymerase moves in the forward
direction This causes one of the new strands to
be in pieces
10As the new DNA strands grow Ligase bonds the
fragments together
11Once DNA polymerase reaches the end the two new
strands are finished
The fragmented strand is now whole due to Ligase
12DNA Replication
13Before we go on to cell division
- What is the structure of DNA?
- How are the bases paired?
- What is the function of DNA?
- Replicate the following chain
- TAC TTG AAA TGA CCC ACG ACT
- AUG AAC TTT ACT GGG TGC TGA
14Back to Cell Division
- Cells pass through a life cycle of 5 phases
- In single-celled eukaryotes,
- cell cycle is the major mechanism for asexual
reproduction - In multicellular eukaryotes,
- Development
- Growth
15Cell Cycle Overview
- Key Events
- Cell grows (interphase)
- DNA doubles (interphase)
- Nucleus divides (prophasetelophase)
- Cyotplasm divides (telophase)
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17Mitosis an Overview
- Interphase each chromosome is uncoiled and in an
unreplicated state
18Mitosis an Overview
- interphase, each chromosome is replicated. The
replicated chromosome consists of two sister
chromatids attached at the centromere.
19Mitosis an Overview
- At the beginning of mitosis, the chromosomes coil
and become visible (still Interphase). Note that
the chromosome is still in a replicated state,
with a sister chromatids attached at the
centromere.
20Mitosis an Overview
- Anaphase the centromere splits, the sister
chromatids separate and become daughter
chromosomes, the daughter chromosomes move to
opposite sides of the cell.
21Mitosis an Overview
- At the end of mitosis, the chromosomes on each
side of the cell uncoil and form two new,
identical nuclei. (telophase)
22A. Prophase
- 1. Chromosomes coil up and become individually
visible. - 2. The nuclear membrane disappears
- 3. The mitotic spindle will form between the
centrosomes. - 5. microtubules attach to the centromere of each
sister chromatid
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24A. Metaphase
- 1. Chromosomes line up on the middle of the
spindle. - 2. Each chromosome has microtubules attached to
the centromere of each of its sister chromatids.
25B. Anaphase
- 1. Chromosomes move to opposite ends of the
cell. One chromatid from each chromosome goes to
each end of the cell. - Use spindel fibers to do this
- a) Why cant DNA fragments without a centromere
be passed on to further generations? - b) Why cant chromosomes have more than one
centromere?
26A. Telophase
- 1. Chromosomes reach the opposite ends of the
cell. - 2. Chromosomes uncoil
- 3. The spindle disintegrates,
- 4. The nucleolus reappears
- 5. The cytoplasm divides in a process known as
cytokinesis. - a) using either a cell plate or cleavage furrow
- b). This produces two cells each identical to
the original cell (except, of course for errors
in DNA duplication).
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28Mitosis an Overview
- During what stage of the cell cycle do the
drawings take place? - What is a chromosome? A chromatid? A sister
chromatid? A daughter chromosome? And in what
stage of the cell cycle do we find each?