The Cell Cycle. Your cells are dividing… You need new cells for: –replacing all of the cells that are dying. –Repairing injury –New growth (getting taller/wider)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Cell Cycle.
Advertisements

10.2 The Process of Cell Division
1 Review What are chromosomes Compare and Contrast How does the structure of chromosomes differ in prokaryotes and eukaryotes 2 Review What happens during.
CELL DIVISION.  When cell divides forming 2 new cells  Prokaryotic cells  Called Binary Fission  Split into 2 parts  Eukaryotic cells  Called Mitosis.
Why is cell size limited?
Mitosis Flash Cards Ch 4.
Section 10.2 (Pg ): The Process of Cell Division
The Cell Cycle. The life of the Cell: Just like an organism the cells also have a life cycle. Each cell is made to be a copy of its parent cell. The cells.
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
The Cell Cycle and Mitosis
The Cell Cycle. What is the life cycle of a cell? Is it like this? –Birth –Growth & development –Reproduction –Deterioration & Death Or is it like this?
Eukaryotic Cell Reproduction Interphase, Mitosis, and Cytokinesis.
Cell Growth. Before a cell gets too large, it divides forming two “daughter” cells.
Mitosis.  Common to most living things  Sequence of growth and division of a cell.
Chapter 8. Cells must divide for Growth Repair Cells cannot just continue to grow larger for two reasons: Exchanging materials The surface area of the.
A. All multicellular organisms depend on cell division for growth. B. Repair 1. In order to sustain life, the organism must replace dead or damaged cells.
Chapter 9 – Cellular Reproduction
Mitosis Cells must divide in order to create new cells. This is more complicated in eukaryotic cells because there are so many organelles. Bacteria can.
“Cell division is part of the cell cycle”
Mitosis (Cell Division) MITOSIS. Vocab 1.Cell Cycle: the life cycle of a eukaryotic cell, consisting of growth and division 2.Chromatin: uncoiled DNA.
Honors Biology Spring  With your neighbor, discuss the following:  What does “The Cell Cycle” refer to?  What are the main stages?
* How did I grow taller? * How are my worn out cells replaced? * How do I heal from injuries? The answer is….Cellular Reproduction or Mitosis.
Cells divide during mitosis and cytokinesis. Cells that make up the “body” of an organism 2.
“Cell division is part of the cell cycle” SECTION 3.2 & 3.3.
Mitosis and Meiosis. The Cell Cycle DNA: contains the information that tells a cell how to make proteins. Chromosomes: coiled structure of DNA and protein.
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
Cell Division Mitosis. Produces 2 cells – called daughter cells – from one parent cell Daughter cells are identical to each another and to the original.
Lesson Overview Lesson Overview The Process of Cell Division Lesson Overview 10.2 The Process of Cell Division.
Cell Cycle *Cellular Division. Reproduction ●Asexual reproduction: generates offspring that are genetically identical to a single parent. Requires only.
Cell Reproduction PART 2: THE CELL CYCLE & MITOSIS.
Cell Growth and Division. Growth vs. Division When an animal or plant grows, what happens to its cells? Does an animal get larger because each cell increases.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Ch 8.2 Cell Growth and Reproduction Learning about Asexual and Sexual reproduction of Cells.
What Limits a Cell’s Size? 1. DNA content if cell is too large, DNA can’t control all of it 2. Diffusion Is efficient only over short distances – big.
The Cell Cycle: Mitosis Notes. Facts * Somatic cells – “soma” means body * Body cells each contain the same number of chromosomes *How many chromosomes.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Cellular Division.
The Cell Cycle.
The Process of Cell Division (10.2)
Cell Division Cell Cycle and Mitosis.
***DRAW ALL PICTURES***
Cell Division: The Process of Mitosis
Cell Division & Mitosis
I. The Reason for Cell Division
Mitosis and Meiosis Asexual v. Sexual Reproduction
Cell Division Mitosis.
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
Mitosis.
Class Notes 5: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle
The Cell Cycle.
Cell Division The Life of a Cell.
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
Unit 4 Cell Cycle & Mitosis
The Cell Cycle The Life Cycle of a cell : includes Growth, Development, and Reproduction.
Cytokinesis: cleavage furrow, cell plate
The cell cycle has four main stages.
Mitosis and Meiosis Asexual v. Sexual Reproduction
Mitosis.
Unit: The Cell Cycle 1.
What’s in the Nucleus? Genetic material Helix Found in the nucleus
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Mitosis.
The Cell Cycle Section 4:3.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Stages of the Cell cycle.
Cell Division & Mitosis
What are the phases of Mitosis. Do Now: Why do cells divide
The Cell Cycle.
Presentation transcript:

The Cell Cycle

Your cells are dividing… You need new cells for: –replacing all of the cells that are dying. –Repairing injury –New growth (getting taller/wider) Facts: You replace all of your skin every 27 days. 300 million cells in your body die and must be replaced every minute.

50,000 of the cells in your body will die and be replaced with new cells, all while you have been reading this sentence!

From beginning to end… The cell cycle begins when the cell is formed Cell grows increase cytoplasm till it can’t hold anymore….or else… The cycle ends when the cell divides and forms new cells.

Before cells divide… 1)Before a cell can divide it must make an extra copy its DNA. 2)This is called Replication -DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) contains all the information that tells the cell how to make proteins.

DNA REPLICATION The DNA is normally long and stringy.(chromatin) The cell winds up the DNA into chromosomes (chromosome shape of an X). The cell has to an entire copy the DNA so that each new cell will have an identical copy of the DNA.

Chromosome Numbers Number of chromosomes has nothing to do with the complexity of organisms. Example: Fruit Flies have 8 chromosomes, potatoes have 48 chromosomes, humans have 46 chromosomes, a single cell protozoa 1600, chickens have 78. For human we have 46 chromosomes (23 pairs) During Replication the number doubles to 92.

Making More Prokaryotic Cells Bacteria undergo binary fission Binary fission is a type of asexual reproduction. Binary fission copies the circular DNA and results in two cells that are equal in size.

Eukaryotic Cells and DNA Eukaryotes are usually much larger and more complex than prokaryotic cells. The number of chromosomes in the cells of eukaryotes differ depending on the organism

Human Chromosomes Humans have.. 46 chromosomes Each pair are made 23 homologous chromosomes pairs. Karyotype Chromosome Map

Making More Eukaryotic Cells Stage 1: Starts just after division – cytoplasm grows –toward the end the DNA condense and makes an extra copy. (replication) The two copies are called sister chromatids. Chromosomes are held together at the centromere. (in the center) Connects all 2 sister chromatids.

Making More Eukaryotic Cells Stage 2: The chromatids separate in a process called mitosis. Mitosis ensures that each new cell receives a copy of each chromosome.

Stages of Mitosis Interphase Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase Cytokinesis

Interphase Before mitosis begins… –The cell grows (cytoplasm) –the chromosomes are replicated (copied). Each chromosome now consists of two chromatids.

Prophase The nuclear envelope breaks apart Chromosomes condense to rod-like structures (like an X). The centrioles move to opposite sides of the cell spindle fibers form between centrioles.

Metaphase Chromosomes line up along the equator (middle) of the cell. Each chromosome attaches to a spindle fiber.

Anaphase The chromatids separate Chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of the cell by the fibers attached to the centrioles.

Telophase The nuclear membrane forms around the two sets of chromosomes Chromosomes unwind, the fibers disappear. mitosis is complete.

Cytokinesis In plant cells, a cell plate forms between the two cells (this is will become the cell wall) In animal cells a cleavage furrow forms as the two cells pinch apart. Cell Plate Cleavage furrow

Cytokinesis Once mitosis is completed, the cytoplasm splits in tow. This results in two identical cells that are also identical to the original cell from which they were formed. After cytokenesis, the cell cycle is complete and they will begin the cell cycle again.

Stages of Mitosis

Significance of Cell Division (mitosis and fission) Produces 2 cells that are genetically identical to the parent cell. In unicellular organisms is asexual reproduction. In multicellular organisms: -Primarily--growth and repair

How are Mitosis and Binary Fission Different? Binary Fission is… Is not mitosis (no phases). Has no spindle fibers or microtubules of any kind. The DNA does not condense into a distinct chromosome