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CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance. Overview: Reproduction: asexual & sexual prokaryotes eukaryotes Mitosis Meiosis Abnormalities. The life cycle of a multicellular organism includes development Reproduction: the birth of new organisms.
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CHAPTER 8The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Overview: Reproduction: asexual & sexual prokaryotes eukaryotes Mitosis Meiosis Abnormalities
The life cycle of a multicellular organism includes • development • Reproduction: the birth of new organisms • Cell division is at the heart of the reproduction of cells and organisms; cell division plays a role in replacement of lost or damaged cells • Organisms can reproduce sexually or asexually • Just in the past second, millions of your cells have divided in two
Some organisms make exact copies of themselves, asexual reproduction • Some organisms can also reproduce asexually • This sea star is regenerating a lost arm • Regeneration results from repeated cell divisions
The Reproduction of Organisms • In asexual reproduction, single-celled organisms reproduce by simple cell division
Cells arise only from preexisting cells • All cells come from cells • Cellular reproduction is called cell division • Cell division allows an embryo to develop into an adult • It also ensures the continuity of life from one generation to the next
Passing On the Genes from Cell to Cell • Before a parent cell divides, it duplicates its chromosomes • The two resulting “daughter” cells are genetically identical
It requires fertilization of an egg by a sperm • Production of egg and sperm is called meiosis • Sexual reproduction is different
Prokaryotes reproduce by binary fission • Prokaryotic cells divide asexually • These cells possess a single chromosome, containing genes • The chromosome is replicated • The cell then divides into two cells, a process called binary fission
THE EUKARYOTIC CELL CYCLE AND MITOSIS The large, complex chromosomes of eukaryotes duplicate with each cell division • An eukaryotic cell has many more genes than a prokaryotic cell • The genes are grouped into multiple chromosomes, found in the nucleus • The chromosomes of this plant cell are stained dark purple
Is the complete set of an organism’s genes • Is located mainly on chromosomes in the cell’s nucleus • A genome
Eukaryotic Chromosomes • Are made of chromatin, a combination of DNA and protein molecules • Are not visible in a cell until cell division • Chromosomes
The Cell Cycle • Eukaryotic cells that divide undergo an orderly sequence of events called the cell cycle
The cell cycle consists of two major phases: • Interphase, where chromosomes duplicate and cell parts are made • The mitotic phase, when cell division occurs
Interphase • Eukaryotic cell division consists of two stages: • Mitosis • Cytokinesis • Mitosis • Is the division of the chromosomes • Is preceded by interphase
In mitosis, the duplicated chromosomes are distributed into two daughter nuclei • After the chromosomes coil up, a mitotic spindle moves them to the middle of the cell • Mitosis consists of four distinct phases:
The process of cytokinesis divides the cell into two genetically identical cells • The sister chromatids then separate and move to opposite poles of the cell
Typically occurs during telophase • Is the division of the cytoplasm • Cytokinesis
Cytokinesis differs for plant and animal cells • In animals, cytokinesis occurs by cleavage • This process pinches the cell apart
Anchorage, cell density, and chemical growth factors affect cell division • Most animal cells divide only when stimulated, and others not at all • In laboratory cultures, most normal cells divide only when attached to a surface • They are anchorage dependent
This is called density-dependent inhibition • Cells continue dividing until they touch one another
Growth factors are proteins secreted by cells that stimulate other cells to divide
Growth factors signal the cell cycle control system • Proteins within the cell control the cell cycle • Signals affecting critical checkpoints determine whether the cell will go through a complete cycle and divide
The binding of growth factors to specific receptors on the plasma membrane is usually necessary for cell division
Cancer Cells: Growing Out of Control • Normal plant and animal cells have a cell cycle control system • When the cell cycle control system malfunctions • Cells may reproduce at the wrong time or place • A benign tumor may form What Is Cancer? • What is cancer? • Cancer is caused by a breakdown in control of the cell cycle
Cancer Treatment • Radiation therapy disrupts cell division • Chemotherapy involves drugs that disrupt cell division • Cancer treatment
Cancer Prevention and Survival • Cancer prevention includes changes in lifestyle • Not smoking • Avoiding exposure to the sun • Eating a high-fiber, low-fat diet • Visiting the doctor regularly • Performing regular self-examinations
MEIOSIS AND CROSSING OVER Chromosomes are matched in homologous pairs • Somatic cells of each species contain a specific number of chromosomes • Human cells have 46, making up 23 pairs of homologous chromosomes
Homologous Chromosomes • Different organisms of the same species have the same number and types of chromosomes • A somatic cell • Is a typical body cell • Has 46 chromosomes in a human • Humans have • Two different sex chromosomes, X and Y • 22 pairs of matching chromosomes, called autosomes
Gametes have a single set of chromosomes • Cells with two sets of chromosomes are said to be diploid • Gametes are haploid, with only one set of chromosomes
Repeated mitotic divisions lead to the development of a mature adult • The adult makes haploid gametes by meiosis • All of these processes make up the sexual life cycle of organisms • At fertilization, a sperm fuses with an egg, forming a diploid zygote
Their cells contain two sets of chromosomes • Their gametes are haploid, having only one set of chromosomes • Humans are diploid organisms • Fertilization • Is the fusion of sperm and egg • Creates a zygote, or fertilized egg
Meiosis reduces the chromosome number from diploid to haploid • Meiosis, like mitosis, is preceded by chromosome duplication • However, in meiosis the cell divides twice to form four daughter cells
While they are paired, they cross over and exchange genetic information • The homologous pairs are then separated, and two daughter cells are produced • In the first division, meiosis I, homologous chromosomes are paired
The sister chromatids of each chromosome separate • The result is four haploid daughter cells • Meiosis II is essentially the same as mitosis
Review: A comparison of mitosis and meiosis • For both processes, chromosomes replicate only once, during interphase
Independent orientation of chromosomes in meiosis and random fertilization lead to varied offspring • Each chromosome of a homologous pair comes from a different parent • Each chromosome thus differs at many points from the other member of the pair
The Origins of Genetic Variation • Offspring of sexual reproduction are genetically different from their parents and from one another • The large number of possible arrangements of chromosome pairs at metaphase I of meiosis leads to many different combinations of chromosomes in gametes • Random fertilization also increases variation in offspring
Random Fertilization • The human egg cell is fertilized randomly by one sperm, leading to genetic variety in the zygote Homologous chromosomes carry different versions of genes • The differences between homologous chromosomes are based on the fact that they can carry different versions of a gene at corresponding loci
Crossing Over • Homologous chromosomes exchange genetic information • Genetic recombination occurs • In crossing over
Crossing over further increases genetic variability • Crossing over is the exchange of corresponding segments between two homologous chromosomes • Genetic recombination results from crossing over during prophase I of meiosis • This increases variation further
ALTERATIONS OF CHROMOSOME NUMBER AND STRUCTURE A karyotype is a photographic inventory of an individual’s chromosomes • To study human chromosomes microscopically, researchers stain and display them as a karyotype • A karyotype usually shows 22 pairs of autosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes • A karyotype is an orderly arrangement of chromosomes
Connection: An extra copy of chromosome 21 causes Down syndrome • This karyotype shows three number 21 chromosomes • An extra copy of chromosome 21 causes Down syndrome
Accidents during meiosis can alter chromosome number • Abnormal chromosome count is a result of nondisjunction • Either homologous pairs fail to separate during meiosis I
Connection: Abnormal numbers of sex chromosomes do not usually affect survival • Nondisjunction can also produce gametes with extra or missing sex chromosomes • Unusual numbers of sex chromosomes upset the genetic balance less than an unusual number of autosomes
Connection: Alterations of chromosome structure can cause birth defects and cancer • Chromosome breakage can lead to rearrangements that can produce genetic disorders or cancer • Four types of rearrangement are deletion, duplication, inversion, and translocation