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Take 5 9/21. What is the difference between active transport and passive transport? What is osmosis? Why is it important? What is endocytosis and exocytosis?. Take 5. If cells are placed in a strong sugar solution, water will _____.
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Take 5 9/21 • What is the difference between active transport and passive transport? • What is osmosis? Why is it important? • What is endocytosis and exocytosis?
Take 5 • If cells are placed in a strong sugar solution, water will _____. • If a cell is placed in salt water, water leaves the cell by _____. • The structure most responsible for maintaining cell homeostasis is the _____.
Take 5 • In which phase of mitosis do the chromosomes line at the equator? • Describe cytokinesis • Describe telophase
Take 5 Mitosis • The process by which a cell’s nucleus divides is called _______________. • The stage of the cell cycle where the cell undergoes intense growth.______________ • Name the correct sequence of the cell cycle. • What is the result of mitosis? G1 (gap 1) G1, S, G2, Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase, Cytokinesis 2 identical Cells
Take 5 • A cell moves particles from a region of lesser concentration to a region of greater concentration by __________________. • As a cell grows, its __________ increases more than its ____________. • Each of the following is an example of passive transport except: Facilitated Diffusion Osmosis Exocytosis Diffusion Active transport volume Surface area ________________
Section 8.2 Cell Growth and Reproduction
I. Cell Size Limitations • Cell come in a wide variety of ____________ and shapes. • EX: Red blood cells only 8 micrometers, nerve cells can reach up to one meter in length…. • Diffusion limits cell size • Within the cell, nutrients and wastes move by ____________ • Diffusion become slow and inefficient as the distance become _______________ sizes diffusion larger
I. Cell Size Limitations • DNA limits cell size • __________ are used throughout the cell to perform critical cell function. • There is a limit to how quickly these directions for protein production can be _____________ • Surface area-to-volume ratio • As the cell’s size __________, its volume increases much faster than its surface area. Proteins copied increases
I. Cell Size Limitations • EX: Cell has 1 mm sides Cell has 2 mm sides
I. Cell Size Limitations 2. Because cell size can have a dramatic effect on a cell, cells _______ before they become too large to function properly. divide
II. Cell Reproduction The process by which new cells are produced from one cell • Cell division= _______________________ __________________________________ • Cell division results in _______ cells that are identical to the original parent cell. EX: Old cells on the soles of your feet are being shed and replaced. • The discovery of chromosomes * _______________=cell structure that carry the genetic material that is copied and passed from generation to generation of cells. two Chromosomes
II. Cell Reproduction • Early biologists observed that just before ____________, several short stringy structures suddenly appeared in the nucleus. • These structures seemed to vanish after division of the cell. • These structures are called ______________. * Accurate transmission of chromosome during cell division is critical. Cell division chromosomes
II. Cell Reproduction • The structure of the eukaryotic chromosomes • For most of a cell’s lifetime ___________ exist as chromatin. • _____________= long strands of DNA wrapped around proteins called histones. 1. The chromosomes of a eukaryotic cell undergo changes in shape and structure during the different phases of the _____________. (fig 8.10 on page 205 chromosomes Chromatin Cell cycle
III. The Cell Cycle Cell Cycle • _____________= is the sequence of growth and development of a cell. • As a cell proceeds through its cycle, it goes through _________ general periods. • ___________________________________ • ___________________________________ • Interphase • During interphase a cell grows in ____________ and carries on ________________. • _____________ are duplicated in preparation for division. two Interphase- period of growth Mitosis- Period of division size metabolism Chromosomes
III. The Cell Cycle • Mitosis • Following interphase, a cell enters its period of _____________ division • This is the process by which two daughter cells are formed, each containing a complete set of ___________. • _____________ and ____________ make up the bulk of the cell cycle. • Following mitosis the cytoplasm divides separating the two daughter cells, this is called cytokinesis. (fig 8.11, page 206) nuclear chromosomes Interphase Mitosis
IV. Interphase: A Busy Time 3 • Interphase is divided into _______ stages • _______ (gap1)- the cell undergoes intense growth • ________ (synthesis)- genetic material copied • _______(gap 2)- centrioles, mitochondria or other organelles replicate, cell prepare for division. G1 S Phase G2
V. The Phases of Mitosis • Although cell division is a continuous process, biologists recognize four distinct phases of mitosis. • _________________ • _________________ • _________________ • _________________ Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase
V. The Phases of Mitosis • Prophase: The first phase of mitosis (fig 8.13 pg 207) • The chromatin coils to form visible chromosome • Each duplicated chromosome is made up of _______ halves • The two halves are called _________ chromosomes, and they are exact copies of each other. • They are held together by a structure called a __________, which help scientist identify chromosomes. 2 Sister Centromere
Nucleus V. The Phases of Mitosis • ________________ begins to disappear. • In animals cells, the centrioles begin to migrate to opposite ends of the cell. • _______________ begin to appear Spindle Fibers Lkjlj;lj;lkj;ljkjk Kjk S S S S S S S S S
V. The Phases of Mitosis • Metaphase: The Second stage of Mitosis • Doubled chromosomes become __________ to the spindle fibers by their centromeres. • Chromosomes begin to line up on the ____________, or equator. • Each __________ chromatid is attached to its own spindle fiber. * The ensures that each new cell receives an identical and complete set of chromosomes. attached midline sister
V. The Phases of Mitosis • Anaphase: The Third phase of Mitosis • The centromeres split and the sister chromatids are ___________ apart to opposite poles for the cell. (fig8.13, pg 207) pulled
V. The Phases of Mitosis • Telophase: The Fourth phase of Mitosis • Spindle fibers start to break down, the ___________ reappears and new nuclear envelope forms around each set of chromosomes. • A new ___________ begins to form between the two new nuclei. nucleolus membrane
VI. Cytokinesis • Cytokinesis differs between plants and animals • ____________ cells- the plasma membrane pinches in and the two new cells are separtated. • ___________- the cell plate is laid across the cell’s equator, a cell membrane forms around each cell and new cell walls form on each side of the cell plate. Animal Plants
VII. Results of Mitosis • Levels of organization in multicellular organisms • In multicellular organisms, cell growth and reproduction result groups of cell that work together as ________________. • Tissues organize in various combinations to form ____________. • Multiple organs that work together to an organ _____________. • All organ systems work together for the survival of the organism. Tissue organs Organ system
Section 8.3 Control of the Cell Cycle
I. Normal Control of the Cell Cycle Proteins • Some cells divide rapidly, while other divide slowly. • _____________ and enzymes control the cell cycle. • Cell cycle is controlled by proteins called ____________ and a set of enzymes that attach to the cyclin. • ____________= is a result of uncontrolled cell division. • The loss of control may be caused by ________ factors or by changes in enzyme production. • Enzyme production is directed by ________, which are segments of DNA. cyclins Cancer environmental genes
I. Normal Control of the Cell Cycle • Cancer: A mistake in the Cell Cycle • Currently, scientists consider cancer to be a result of changes in one or more of the _________ that aid in controlling the cell cycle. • These changes are due expressed as _________ when something prompts the damaged genes into action. • Cancerous cells form masses of tissue called _______. • In later stages, cancer cells enter the ________ system and spread throughout the body forming new tumors. genes cancer tumors circulatory
I. Normal Control of the Cell Cyclehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5pP4bMm9yNQ • The Cause of Cancer • It is difficult to pinpoint because both _______ and _____________ factors are involved. Ex of environmental factors- cigarette smoke, air and water pollution and exposure to ultraviolet radiation • Cancer Prevention 1. Healthily __________ and not using __________ are recommended to reduce the risk of cancer. genetic environmental diet tobacco http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSTPBZz03Rk