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The Cell Cycle Chapter 12. Mitosis. Cell division Produce 2 daughter cells Same genetic information. Mitosis. Asexual reproduction Growth Repair. Genome. Genetic information Prokayotes Nucleoid Circular DNA No nucleus. Genome. Eukaryotes Chromosomes: DNA Associated proteins
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Mitosis • Cell division • Produce 2 daughter cells • Same genetic information
Mitosis • Asexual reproduction • Growth • Repair
Genome • Genetic information • Prokayotes • Nucleoid • Circular DNA • No nucleus
Genome • Eukaryotes • Chromosomes: • DNA • Associated proteins • Chromatin: • Complex of DNA & proteins • Makes up chromosomes • Humans 46 chromosomes • Dogs 78 chromosomes
Eukaryotes • Somatic cells: • Body cells • 46 chromosomes • Gametes: • Sex cells • Sperm & eggs • 23 chromosomes
Eukaryotes • Chromatid: • Duplicated chromosome • Centromere: • Attachment to another chromatid • Prior to cell division chromosomes replicates
0.5 µm Chromosomes DNA molecules Fig. 12-4 Chromo- some arm Chromosome duplication (including DNA synthesis) Centromere Sister chromatids Separation of sister chromatids Centromere Sister chromatids
Fig. 12-5 INTERPHASE S (DNA synthesis) G1 Cytokinesis G2 Mitosis MITOTIC (M) PHASE
Cell cycle • Cell cycle: • Events that occur to produce two cells • 1. Interphase (G1, S, G2) • 2. Mitosis • 3. Cytokinesis
Interphase • Growth phase of the cell • G1, S, G2
Interphase • Where most of cycle is spent • Rate of division depends on job of cell. • Liver cells may divide rapidly • Mature muscle cells do not divide at all • Few cells will be in mitosis at a time • Most are in interphase
Interphase • G1 or Gap 1 phase • Cell is doing its job • Preparing for the S phase. • Chromosomes are single • Can last weeks to years or happen very quickly
Interphase • S phase DNA replication happens • 2 sister chromatids • G2 or Gap 2 phase cell prepares for division • Mitochondria & other organelles replicate • Microtubules begin to form • Chromosomes condense
Mitosis • Nucleus & its contents divide • Distributed equally • Forming two daughter cells • Prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase
Prophase • Beginning of mitosis • Chromosomes continues to condense • Mitotic spindle forms • Begins to move chromosomes to center • Nuclear membrane disintegrates • Nucleolus disappears
Metaphase • Chromosomes line up in center of cell • Centromeres become aligned along the cells center
Anaphase • Microtubules shorten • Separates the sister chromatids • Chromosomes move towards the poles
Telophase • Chromosomes are at the poles • Nuclear envelope reforms • Nucleolus reappears • Chromosomes uncoil or de-condense
Cytokinesis • Cytoplasm separates • Animal cells: • cleavage furrow pinches the cells in two • Plant cells: • cell plate is formed between the cells • Grows until a new cell wall is formed
Fig. 12-9 Vesicles forming cell plate Wall of parent cell 1 µm 100 µm Cleavage furrow Cell plate New cell wall Daughter cells Contractile ring of microfilaments Daughter cells (a) Cleavage of an animal cell (SEM) (b) Cell plate formation in a plant cell (TEM)
Binary fission • Prokaryotes produce 2 daughter cells by binary fission
Binary fission • 1. Replication of the DNA • Origin of replication: • Specific location on the DNA • 2. Two DNA molecules move to the ends of the cell • 3. Septation • Formation of a new cell membrane & a septum.
Binary fission • 4. Septum begins to grow inward • 5. Cell pinches into two cells.
Cell cycle control system • Check points • Control point with stop & go signals • G1, G2 and M phases
Fig. 12-14 G1 checkpoint Control system S G1 G2 M M checkpoint G2 checkpoint
Cell cycle control system • Special proteins • Protein kinases & cyclins • Cdks – cycle dependent kinases • MPF-cyclin-Cdk complex • “M-phase promoting factor” • Regulate if cell stops or proceeds in the cycle
Fig. 12-17b G1 S Cdk Cyclin accumulation M G2 Degraded cyclin G2 checkpoint Cdk Cyclin is degraded Cyclin MPF (b) Molecular mechanisms that help regulate the cell cycle
Figure 12.16a G2 M G1 G1 S M S M G1 G2 MPF activity Cyclinconcentration Time (a) Fluctuation of MPF activity and cyclin concentration during the cell cycle
Cell cycle control system • Go-ahead signal at G1 • Divides • No signal • G0 phase • Does not divide
G1 checkpoint G0 Figure 12.17 G1 G1 Without go-ahead signal,cell enters G0. With go-ahead signal,cell continues cell cycle. (a) G1 checkpoint G1 S G2 M G1 G1 M G2 M G2 M checkpoint G2checkpoint Anaphase Prometaphase Metaphase With full chromosomeattachment, go-ahead signalis received. Without full chromosomeattachment, stop signal isreceived. (b) M checkpoint
Cell cycle control system • Receives signals • The environment • Other cells • Growth factors • Density-dependent inhibition • Anchorage dependence
Tumor • Abnormal growth of cells • Malfunction in control system • Abnormal cells grow uncontrollably • Benign: • Non-cancerous growth
Tumor • Malignant: • Cancerous growth • Metastasis: • Spread of cancer to distant locations
p53 • Protein • Works at a checkpoint at G1 • p53 determines if DNA is damaged • If so stimulates enzymes to fix it • Cell division continues • Unable to repair damage • Cell suicide occurs
p53 • Helps keep damaged cells from dividing • Cancer cells p53 is absent or damaged • p53 protein is found on the p53 gene • Considered a tumor-suppressor gene • Cigarette smoking causes mutations in this gene
Henrietta Lacks • 1951 developed cervical cancer • Before cancer treatment • Cells were removed • First cells to grow in vitro • Outside of the body • Cell line is now known as HeLa cell line • Helped in biomedical research