120 likes | 322 Views
Ch 10- Cell Growth. What problems does growth cause for the cell? Larger a cell becomes, the more demands that cell places on its DNA The cell has more trouble moving enough nutrients and wasted across the cell membrane Where is the information that tells cells what to do stored at? DNA
E N D
Ch 10- Cell Growth • What problems does growth cause for the cell? • Larger a cell becomes, the more demands that cell places on its DNA • The cell has more trouble moving enough nutrients and wasted across the cell membrane • Where is the information that tells cells what to do stored at? • DNA • Understanding the relationship between a cell’s volume and surface are is key to understanding why cells must divide as they grow
Division of the Cell • If cell got to large, it would be more difficult to get sufficient amounts of oxygen and nutrients in and waste products out • Cell division- process by which a cell divides into two new daughter cells • Copies DNA, each daughter cell gets one complete set of genetic information- solves the problem of information storage • Solves the problem of increasing size by reducing cell volume- each daughter cell has an increased ratio of surface area to volume
Sec 2- Cell Division • Prokaryotes- process of cell division is simply separating the contents of the cell into two parts • Eukaryotes- process is more complex and occurs in 2 stages • Mitosis- division of cell nucleus • Asexual, cells produced are identical to parent cell • Source of new cells as multi-cellular organism grows and develops • Begins shortly after egg is fertilized • Cytokinesis- division of cytoplasm
Chromosomes • What are they? • Carries the genetic information passed from one generation to the next, made of DNA and proteins • How many chromosomes do human cells have? • 46 • Not visible except during cell division • Before cell division, chromosomes are replicated • Each chromosomes consist of 2 identical “sister” chromatids- when cell divides one chromatid goes to each of two new cells • Centromeres- area where chromatids are attached, usually located near middle
Cell Cycle • During the cell cycle, a cell grows, prepares for division, and divides to form two daughter cells, each of which then begins the cycle again • Interphase- the in between time between cell division • Cell cycle- series of events that cells go through as they grow and divide • Cell cycle consists of 4 phases • Mitosis and cytokinesis take place during M phase • Chromosome replication takes place during S phase • G phases are periods of intense growth and activity
Events of the Cell Cycle • Interphase- phase is quite long, made up of G₁, S, and G₂ phases • G₁ phase- where cells do most of their growing • Cells increase in size and synthesize new proteins and organelles • S phase- chromosomes are replicated and synthesis of DNA molecules takes place • G₂ phase- many of organelles and molecules required for cell division are produced • Cell is ready for the M phase and begin process of cell division
Mitosis • Divided into 4 phases- prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase • May last anywhere from few minutes to several days- depends on type of cell • Prophase- chromatin condenses into chromosomes, centrioles separate and a spindle begins to form, nuclear envelope breaks down • Centrioles- two tiny structures located in cytoplasm near nuclear envelope, separate and take position on opposite sides of nucleus • Spindle- fan-like microtubule structure that helps separate the chromosomes
Metaphase- chromosomes line up across the center of cell, each chromosome is connected to a spindle fiber at its centromere • Anaphase- sister chromatids separate into individual chromosomes and are moved apart • Telophase- chromosomes gather at opposite ends of cell and lose their distinct shapes, two new nuclear envelopes will form • Mitosis is complete
Cytokinesis • Result of mitosis= two nuclei each with duplicate set of chromosomes formed within cytoplasm of a single cell • Cytokinesis- division of cytoplasm, usually occurs at same time of telophase • Cytoplasm pinches in half, each daughter cell has an identical set of duplicate chromosomes • Mitosis and Cytokinesis
Sec 3- Regulating the Cell Cycle • Cyclin- proteins that regulate the timing of the cell cycle in eukaryotic cells • Discovered by Tim Hunt and Mark Kirschner • Many more proteins have been discovered since- 2 types of proteins- regulatory proteins in and outside of cell • Internal Regulators- allow cell cycle to proceed only when certain processes have happened inside cell • Make sure cell does not enter mitosis until all chromosomes have been replicated • External Regulators- direct cells to speed up or slow down cell cycle • Growth factors among most important external regulators
Uncontrolled Cell Growth • Why is cell growth regulated so carefully? • Cancer- disorder in which some of body’s own cells lose the ability to control growth • Do not respond to the signals that regulate the growth of most cells • Divide uncontrollably and form masses of cells called tumors • May break free from tumor and spread to rest of body • What causes the loss of growth control that characterize cancer? • Smoking tobacco, radiation exposure, viral infection