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Cell Reproduction: Mitosis & Meiosis. Chapter 8 (and the beginning of Chapter 10). Overview. DNA replication Overview of cell division Mitosis Meiosis. DNA Replication. Occurs during interphase of cell cycle 1 DNA molecule untwisted
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Cell Reproduction: Mitosis & Meiosis Chapter 8 (and the beginning of Chapter 10)
Overview • DNA replication • Overview of cell division • Mitosis • Meiosis
DNA Replication Occurs during interphase of cell cycle 1 DNA molecule untwisted Each parent strand serves as template for new strand = 2 new DNA molecules, each ½ old & ½ new = semi-conservative replication
Enzymes break H bonds between 2 strands = unwinds & exposes nucleotide bases Free nucleotides pair with exposed bases Each parent strand has new one made on it = twist together to form double helix
DNA replication in a little more detail … Sugar-phosphate backbones of 2 DNA strands run in opposite directions 5’ end = Phosphate group on sugar’s C 3’ end = –OH group on sugar’s C
DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to 3’ ends only Daughter strand grows in 5’ to 3’ direction = 1 daughter strand synthesized continuously = Other daughter strand synthesized disjointedly
Replication Enzymes: Helicases Catalyze breaking of H bonds so double helix can unwind Work with small proteins to prevent rewinding of parent strands
Replication Enzymes: DNA Polymerases Catalyze addition of free nucleotides to exposed bases on each strand Also have proofreading abilities
Replication Enzymes: DNA Ligases Work on discontinuously-assembled strand Seal together short stretches of new nucleotides
Transcription Only part of DNA strand unwound RNA polymerase adds nucleotides to growing strand Results in 1 free mRNA strand DNA replication Whole DNA molecule unwound DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to growing strand Results in 2 double-helix DNA molecules Transcription vs. DNA replication
Mistakes occur that can be lethal if not caught e.g. wrong base-pairing DNA proofreading mechanisms fix most replication errors & breaks in strands (proofread & correct mismatches) Repair enzymes repair some changes by snipping out damaged sites or mismatches If mismatch can’t be fixed, replication is stopped
Cell Division: An Overview Parents reproduce to produce new generation of cells or multicellular organism Offspring inherits all information & metabolic machinery from parent
Prokaryotic Cell Division Prokaryotic cells reproduce asexually = binary fission
Eukaryotic Cell Division DNA in eukaryotic cells is in nucleus Eukaryotic cells can’t divide by fission Must copy & package DNA into > 1 nucleus before cytoplasm can split
Two Types of Cell Division Mitosis: • Produces 2 genetically identical cells • Happens throughout body Meiosis: • Produces 4 genetically different cells • Cells only have ½ of genetic info • Happens only in gonads
Mitosis One part of the cell cycle Growth, cell replacement, tissue repair Also used for asexual reproduction = organisms clone selves Unique to eukaryotes
The Cell Cycle The period from one cell division to next
Interphase: The Longest Phase 90% of cell cycle length
G1: Gap / Growth Phase Cell growth # of cytoplasmic components doubled
S: Synthesis Phase DNA duplicated
Chromosome & copy = sister chromatids Joined at centromere
G2: Gap or Growth Phase II Makes proteins necessary for cell division Cell prepares to divide
Cells stay in G1 if making macromolecules Enter S when DNA & accessory proteins are copied Rate of DNA replication is same for all cells of a species
Same cycle length for same type of cells Different cycle lengths for different types of cells e.g. cells in red bone marrow divide every second e.g. nerve cells stay in G1 indefinitely Rate of cell division is under control (checkpoints, molecular brakes, etc.)
After G2, cell enters mitosis Mitosis maintains cell’s chromosome #
Chromosome Number Humans have 46 chromosomes = diploid (2n) 2 of each type of chromosome = one set from mother, one from father
During mitosis: Each 2n parent cell produces two 2n daughter cells Each daughter cell has each pair of chromosomes = 23 pairs
During mitosis, 2 sister chromatids (duplicated chromosomes) separate Each becomes independent chromosome that ends up in 1 of daughter cells
The Mitotic Spindle Present in every cell Made of microtubules = change length by addition or removal of tubulin subunits Originates from pair of centrioles
Early in cell division, duplicated chromosome is condensed = coils up DNA winds twice around histones = nucleosome Keeps chromosomes organized during nuclear division
Late Interphase / Pre-Prophase Outside of nucleus, 2 centrioles duplicate selves
Early Prophase Inside nucleus: Chromosomes begin to condense Outside nucleus: Spindle begins to form Nuclear envelope begins to fall apart
Late Prophase Nuclear envelope completely falls apart Spindle fibres from each pole attach to sister chromatids of each chromosome
Metaphase Chromosomes line up halfway between spindle poles
Anaphase Sister chromatids of each chromosome separate & move to opposite poles (motor proteins attached to kinetochores drag chromatids along microtubules) Spindle poles pushed apart by growing microtubules
Telophase 1 of each type of chromosome reaches each spindle pole = 2 identical groups of chromosomes at each cell pole Chromosomes decondense Nuclear envelope forms around each cluster of chromosomes = two nuclei, each with 2n # of chromosomes
Cytokinesis Cytoplasm of cell divides Results in 2 daughter cells, each with same number of chromosomes as parent cell
Cytokinesis in Animal Cells Contractile ring mechanism Halfway between cell’s poles, plasma membrane constricts = cleavage furrow (ATP energy causes contraction of actin filaments) Cleavage furrow deepens until cytoplasm split into 2
Cytokinesis in Plant Cells Cell plate formation Golgi vesicles move to cell equator & fuse Vesicle membranes become cell membranes Contents become cellulose cell wall
Summary of Mitosis Nuclear & cellular division that maintains chromosome # Used for growth, repair, asexual reproduction
Cell division & DNA replication regulated so that: DNA only replicated once before cell division Cells that never divide do not replicate DNA Cells don’t try to replicate DNA if lack the energy & raw materials to complete process
Cellular Controls over Mitosis Anchorage dependence Animal cells must be in contact with a solid surface to divide Density-dependent inhibition Crowded cells stop dividing Growth factors Required to start & continue dividing Secreted by other cells
Cell Cycle Checkpoints Cell cycle has checkpoints: • Structure of chromosomal DNA monitored • Completion of phases monitored • Determines if good time for cell division Rely on internal & external cues
G1 checkpoint is most important: If no go-ahead signal, cell will switch to non-dividing G0 phase e.g. nerve & muscle cells remain in G0 indefinitely
Cancer & Cell Division • If immune system doesn’t recognize & destroy a cancerous cell, it may divide multiple times & form a tumor • Benign • Cells remain localized • Malignant • Spreads to other parts of body & disrupts function
Why don’t cancer cells follow the rules? Don’t exhibit density-dependence Have defective control systems Ignore / over-ride checkpoints Some synthesize own growth factors so continue dividing Divide indefinitely
Types of Cancers Carcinomas Internal & external coverings of body e.g. skin Sarcomas Supportive tissues e.g. bone & muscle Leukemias & Lymphomas Blood-forming tissues e.g. bone marrow, spleen, lymph nodes