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Honors Biology Spring 2013.  With your neighbor, discuss the following:  What does “The Cell Cycle” refer to?  What are the main stages?

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Presentation on theme: "Honors Biology Spring 2013.  With your neighbor, discuss the following:  What does “The Cell Cycle” refer to?  What are the main stages?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Honors Biology Spring 2013

2  With your neighbor, discuss the following:  What does “The Cell Cycle” refer to?  What are the main stages?

3  What are the stages of cell of the cell cycle?

4  Why reproduce? Why not just get larger?

5 A. Cell Sizes most cells are between 2 and 200 μ m in diameter B. Diffusion limits cell size C. DNA limits cell size D. Surface Area to Volume Ratio limits cell size

6 A. Overview of Reproduction 1. A characteristic of all living things 2. One cell - parent cell - divides and forms new cells called the daughter cells 3. Reproduction of the organism depends on the reproduction of the cell a. unicellular organisms b. multicellular organisms

7 A. Overview of Reproduction 4. When a cell reaches a certain size, it divides into daughter cells which are similar in structure to the parent cell 5. Organisms reproduce in 2 basic ways a. asexual reproduction b. sexual reproduction

8 B. Chromosomes 1. Chromosomes are the carriers of the genetic material  made of sections of DNA known as genes 2. become visible right before mitosis 3. # of chromosomes is characteristic of a species 4. cells contain the diploid number of chromosomes

9  Structural review  Chromosomes are composed of 2 identical sister chromatids attached by a centromere  Near the centromere is a kinetochore which is important for attaching the chromosome to the spindle during prophase

10  Diploid- a cell with two of each kind of chromosome; 2n; complete set  Haploid- cell with one of each kind of chromosome; n; ½ set  In mitosis & cytokinesis, 1 diploid cell splits into 2 diploid daughter cells

11 human hapliod number?  23 human diploid number?  46 most all human cells are diploid,  46 chromosomes

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13 C. Cell Cycle 1. The sequence of growth and division of a cell 2. Two general periods a. growth – interphase b. division - mitosis & cytokinesis

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15  The pattern of growth, DNA duplication, and cell division that occurs in eukaryotic cells  4 main phases  Gap 1 (G1): interphase  Synthesis (S): interphase  Gap 2 (G2): interphase  Mitosis (M): mitosis and cytokinesis

16  G1:Cell caries out normal functions and grows  S: DNA is copied (2 sets)  G2: Cell caries out normal functions and grows  A cell spends most of its time in Interphase (90%)  Genetic material is chromatin

17 Phases of Mitosis - cell division of a eukaryotic somatic cell 1. Prophase 2. Metaphase 3. Anaphase 4. Telophase 5. Cytokinesis

18  Nuclear envelope & nucleolus disappear (prometaphase)  Chromatin condenses into chromosomes  Centrioles move to opposite ends of cells (animals)  Spindle (microtubules) begins to form  Longest part of mitosis

19  Doubled chromosomes become attached to the spindle by their kinetochores/ centromeres (prometaphase)  The chromosomes are pulled by the spindle and they begin to line up along the equator of the cell

20  Centromeres split apart  Sister chromatids pull away from each other because of the shortening of the microtubules in the spindle fibers  Each chromatid is now considered a full-fledged chromosome

21  Chromatids reach opposite ends of the cell  Chromosomes unwind back into chromatin  Spindle breaks down  Nuclear membrane and nucleolus reappear

22  Division of the cytoplasm  Usually begins before Telophase is complete  Each daughter cells leaves cytokinesis to start interphase again  Differences in plant and animal cells Cleavage furrowCell plate

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26  Result of mitosis= 2 daughter cells that are genetically identical to the 1 original cell  Rate of mitosis varies on the cell and organism  Mitosis is controlled by enzymes

27  How does mitosis differ in plant and animal cells?

28 plant cells do not have use a cleavage furrow to separate plants use a cell plate to split parent cell in two the cell plate becomes the cell wall of the two daughter cells

29  Why would control of cell division be important?

30 Prokaryotes have a single circular chromosome B. Binary fission

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