Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle (How do cells divide?) - Auburn … ·  · 2014-09-25Chapter 12: The...

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Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle

(How do cells divide?)

cell division in prokaryotes

chromosomes

eukaryotic cell cycle

mitosis

cytokinesis

.

Prokaryotes

binary fission

generation time as short as 20 minutes

.

Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle

(How do cells divide?)

cell division in prokaryotes

chromosomes

eukaryotic cell cycle

mitosis

cytokinesis

.

• Define:

– chromosome

– chromatin

– gene

– genome

– karyotype

• Describe the human genome and

karyotype in terms of:

– number of basepairs

– number of genes

– number of chromosomes

.

Eukaryotic DNA in chromosomes

chromatin: long DNA molecule with associated proteins

chromosomes: densely packaged chromatin

during cell division

protects the DNA

sets up DNA distribution

.

functional units of heredity

typically instructions for a protein or RNA

genome – organism’s complete DNA sequence

humans apparently have ~25,000 genes in the now-sequenced human genome

each chromosome contains

hundreds to thousands of genes

.

chromosomes each species has a

characteristic number of chromosomes

number varies between species

does not reflect complexity

humans: 46

some ferns: 1000+

chromosomes for an individual is the karyotype

.

chromosomes

function: chromosomes carry the genetic information of a cell

from one cell generation to the next

from one organism to its offspring

.

• Define:

– chromosome

– chromatin

– gene

– genome

– karyotype

• Describe the human genome and

karyotype in terms of:

– number of basepairs

– number of genes

– number of chromosomes

.

Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle

(How do cells divide?)

cell division in prokaryotes

chromosomes

eukaryotic cell cycle

mitosis

cytokinesis

.

• Draw a circle diagram of the eukaryotic

cell cycle. Label all phases.

• Discuss what goes on in each of the

phases on the diagram. Note where

checkpoints exist. Also, discuss G0, and

discuss cell cycle regulation in general

terms.

.

Eukaryotic Cell Cycle when cells reach a certain size, growth either

stops or the cell must divide

cell division is generally a highly regulated process (not all will divide!)

the generation time for eukaryotic cells varies widely, but is usually 8-20 hours

.

Eukaryotic Cell Cycle

cyclins and cyclin-dependent protein kinases (Cdks)

cytokinins; growth factors; suppressors; cancer cells

.

• Draw a circle diagram of the eukaryotic

cell cycle. Label all phases.

• Discuss what goes on in each of the

phases on the diagram. Note where

checkpoints exist. Also, discuss G0, and

discuss cell cycle regulation in general

terms.

.

Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle

(How do cells divide?)

cell division in prokaryotes

chromosomes

eukaryotic cell cycle

mitosis

cytokinesis

.

• Describe what “PMAT” means.

• With a partner, do the “chromosome

dance” for mitosis. Make sure that you

distinguish between chromosomes and

chromatids, and note at each stage the

number of sister chromatids per

chromosome.

• Discuss what happens in each stage of

mitosis.

.

Mitosis

4 stages:

prophase

metaphase

anaphase

telophase

(PMAT) *

.

Mitosis: prophase chromatin condenses to form

chromosomes

each chromosome (duplicated during S phase) forms a pair of sister chromatids

sister chromatids are joined at a centromere by protein tethers

centromeres contain a kinetochore where microtubules will bind

each sister chromatid has its own kinetochore

sister chromatids become attached by their kinetochores to microtubules from opposite poles

.

Mitosis: prophase a system of

microtubules, called the mitotic spindle, organizes between the two poles (opposite ends) of the cell

each pole has a microtubule organizing center (MTOC)

in animals and some other eukaryotes, centrioles are found in the MTOC

.

Mitosis: prophase by the end of prophase:

the nuclear membrane has disappeared (actually divided into many small vesicles)

nucleoli have disintegrated

the sister chromatids are attached by their kinetochores to microtubules from opposite poles

.

Mitosis: prophase

some call the later part of prophase prometaphase, usually defined to include vesicularization of the nuclear membrane and attachment of kinetochores to microtubules

in some eukaryotes the nuclear membrane never vesicularizes

.

Mitosis: metaphase chromosomes line up along the

midplane of the cell (the metaphase plate)

chromosomes are highly condensed

the mitotic spindle, now complete, has two types of microtubules

kinetochore microtubules extend from a pole to a kinetochore

polar microtubules extend from a pole to the midplane area, often overlapping with polar microtubules from the other pole

the mitosis checkpoint appears to be here; progress past metaphase is typically prevented until the kinetochores are all attached to microtubules

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Mitosis: anaphase

sister chromatids separate and are moved toward opposite poles

the protein tethers at the centromere between the chromatids are broken

each former sister chromatid can now be called a chromosome

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Mitosis: anaphase model for the mechanism that moves chromosomes to the poles

motor proteins move the chromosomes towards the poles along the kinetochores microtubules

kinetochore microtubules shorten behind the moving chromosomes

polar microtubules lengthen the entire spindle

motor proteins on the polar microtubules slide them past each other, pushing them apart (the microtubules may grow a bit, too)

this pushes the MTOCs away from each other, and thus has the effect of pushing kinetochore microtubules from opposite poles away from each other

*

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Mitosis: anaphase

overall, this process assures that each daughter cell will receive one of the duplicate sets of genetic material carried by the chromosomes

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Mitosis: telophase prophase is essentially

reversed

the mitotic spindle is disintegrated

the chromosomes decondense

nuclear membranes reform around the genetic material to form two nuclei

each has an identical copy of the genetic information

nucleoli reappear, and interphase cellular functions resume

*

.

• Describe what “PMAT” means.

.

• With a partner, do the “chromosome

dance” for mitosis. Make sure that you

distinguish between chromosomes and

chromatids, and note at each stage the

number of sister chromatids per

chromosome.

• Discuss what happens in each stage of

mitosis.

.

Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle

(How do cells divide?)

cell division in prokaryotes

chromosomes

eukaryotic cell cycle

mitosis

cytokinesis

.

• Describe cytokinesis in both plant cells

and animal cells, noting the differences.

• Describe what is meant by the term

“polar division” and why this process

was (and still is) important in your

development.

.

cytokinesis

divides the cell into two daughter cells

cytokinesis usually begins in telophase and ends shortly thereafter

.

cytokinesis

in animals, a cleavage furrow develops

usually close to where the metaphase plate was

a microfilament (actin) ring contracts due to interactions with myosin molecules, forming a deepening furrow

eventually, the ring closes enough for spontaneous separation of the plasma membrane, resulting in two separate cells

*

.

cytokinesis

in plants, a cell plate develops

usually close to where the metaphase plate was

vesicles that originate from the Golgi line up in the equatorial region

the vesicles fuse and add more vesicles

grow outward until reaching the plasma membrane and thus separating the cells

the vesicles contain materials for making the primary cell wall and a middle lamella

*

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cytokinesis

cytoplasm (and with it most organelles) is usually distributed randomly but roughly equally between daughter cells

sometimes cell division is a highly regulated polar division that purposefully distributes some materials unequally

.

• Describe cytokinesis in both plant cells

and animal cells, noting the differences.

• Describe what is meant by the term

“polar division” and why this process

was (and still is) important in your

development.

.

• In the following slide, look for examples

of interphase, prophase, metaphase,

anaphase, and telophase/cytokinesis.