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Published byFrederica Wells Modified over 8 years ago
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Cell Division and Reproduction
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Before a cell becomes too large, it divides forming 2 “daughter” cells. This process is called cell division. It keeps the large SA:V and keeps the cell from having “information overload” by coping its genetic material
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Reproduction Asexual: the production of genetically identical offspring from a single parent Ex: bacteria, hydra, some plants Sexual: offspring produced by sexual reproduction inherit some of their genetic information by each parent Ex: most animals and plants
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Cell Cycle
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Chromosomes- Genetic information (DNA) bundled in to packages – In most prokaryotes, a single chromosome holds most of the organism's DNA
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Eukaryotes usually have much more DNA Chromosomes in eukaryotic cells form a close association with histones, a type of protein. Chromosome + histone= chromatin
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Centrioles- organelle used to pull apart chromosomes Spindle fibers- fibers used to pull apart chromosomes
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Cell cycle: cells grow, prepare for division and divides to form 2 daughter cells Prokaryotic Cell Cycle: Binary Fission (asexual) – DNA duplicates, cell membrane indents, cell divides, 2 new cells with genetically identical organisms are produced
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Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
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Interphase: Resting stage of cycle; DNA is copied
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Interphase G 1 Phase: Cell Growth S Phase: DNA replication G 2 Phase: Preparation for mitosis
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M Phase: follows interphase, produces 2 daughter cells
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Prophase The DNA condenses into visible chromosomes The nuclear envelope disappears Spindle fibers form
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Metaphase Chromosomes align at the center of the cell Spindle fibers connect the centromere of each chromosome to the two poles of the spindle
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Anaphase The sister chromatids pulled apart by spindle
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Telophase Chromatids are at opposite ends of cell Nuclear envelope reforms Spindle disappears, chromosomes disappear
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Cytokinesis The cytoplasm divides into two cells. Each cell is identical to the parent cell
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Mitosis- the nucleus divides Cytokinesis- the cytoplasm divides Cytokinesis in plant cells: cell wall is too ridged to bend so a cell plate forms and later becomes the cell membranes followed by the new cell wall
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Regulating the Cell Cycle The cell cycle is controlled by regulator proteins both inside and outside the cell Cyclin: a protein that regulates the cell cycle
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Internal regulators: respond to events within the cell – Ex: proteins that make sure a cell does not enter mitosis until its chromosomes have replicated External regulators: respond to events outside the cell – Ex: Growth factors stimulate the growth and division of cells
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Apoptosis: Programmed Cell Death
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Cancer: uncontrolled cell growth Cancer cells do not respond to signals that regulate the growth of most cells. Could be caused by defects in the genes that regulate cell growth and divisions Sources of such defects include: smoking or chewing tobacco, radiation exposure, other defective genes
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