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Ch. 8: The Cell Cycle

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Ch. 8: The Cell Cycle. Why does a cell divide?. As a cell absorbs nutrients and gets larger, the volume of the cell increases faster than the surface area. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Ch. 8: The Cell Cycle
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Page 1: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Ch. 8: The Cell Cycle

Page 2: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Why does a cell divide?

-As a cell absorbs nutrients and gets larger, the volume of the cell increases faster than the surface area.

-Therefore, the demands of the cell (the volume) exceed the ability of the cell to bring in nutrients and export wastes. Solution? Divide into two smaller cells

Page 3: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

When is cell division occurring?

GROWTH -increase number of cellsREPAIR -replace lost cells due to injury, diseaseCANCER – Abnormally high rates of cell division due to mutation

Different kinds of cells divide at different rates:E. coli – 20 minutes (What domain?)

Yeast cell – 2 hours (What domain? What kingdom?)

Amoeba – a few days (What domain? What kingdom?)

Human embryo cell – 15-20 minutesHuman adult cell – 8 hours to 100 days

Page 4: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

AgingAll cells die after a certain number of divisions (programmed cell death-”apoptosis”). At any given time some cells are dividing and some cells are dying.

Childhood Cell division > cell death

Adulthood Cell division = cell death

Aging Cell division < cell death

Page 6: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Interphase

Interphase ~ 90% of the time.

   G1: Little new cell absorbs nutrients and grows larger. Does protein synthesis, its job.

   S phase: Synthesis of new DNA (DNA replication) for daughter cells in preparation for mitosis.

   G2: Cell continues to grow, do protein synthesis, do its job. Gets too large, needs to divide.

Page 7: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Chromosomes exist in 2 different states, before and after they replicate their DNA.

Before replication chromosomes = 1 chromatid.

After replicationchromosomes = 2 sister

chromatids, held together at the centromere. Each chromatid is one piece of DNA with its supporting proteins.

Page 8: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Structure of a eukaryotic chromosome

• unreplicated chromosome

arm armcentromere

Page 9: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Prior to cell division:• chromosomes (DNA) are replicated (duplicated)

duplicatedchromosome

• duplicated chromosome – attached at their centromeres – as long as attached, known as sister chromatids

Page 10: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

daughterchromosomes

sisterchromatids

Page 11: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

• Division of somatic cells (body cells)(non reproductive cells) ineukaryotic organisms

What is Mitotic Cell Division?

• A single cell divides into two identical daughter cells (cellular reproduction)

=> Maintains chromosome ploidy of cell

Page 12: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

MITOSISEqual distribution of the 2 sets of DNA amongst the 2 daughter cells.

4 Stages: “PMAT”

1. Prophase

2. Metaphase

3. Anaphase

4. Telophase

How the Cell Cycle Works

Mitosis Animation

Cell Cycle

Page 13: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

As a cell enters mitosis from interphase it has 2 complete sets of chromosomes because of replication in the S phase.

Each set must be re-arranged and distributed into the 2 new daughter nuclei. This is mitosis.

Page 14: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

 

• Chromatin condenses (coils) into chromosomes. (Sister chromatids joined by centromere)

• Nuclear membrane dissolves.

• Nucleolus disappears.• Centrioles divide and

move to opposite poles forming spindle b/w them.

Prophase…

Page 15: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

chromatin

nucleolus

nucleus

centrioles

condensingchromosomes

Page 16: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Metaphase

-Sister chromatids line up on metaphase plate.

-Centromeres lock on to spindle fibers

Page 17: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Anaphase• Centromeres divide.• Spindle fibers

contract pulling sister chromatids apart to poles.

Page 18: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

•Telophase:New nuclear membranes form around new nuclei

Mitosis Movie

Page 19: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

CYTOKINESIS – Cytoplasm splits into 2 cells.Animal cells: Cleavage furrow forms from outside in.

 

Plant cells: Division/cell plate forms from inside out.

Page 20: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Cell now returns to interphase . The chromosomes uncoil back into chromatin. The whole cell cycle starts over again…..

http://www.cellsalive.com/mitosis.htm

Page 21: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

At any point in time the cells in a tissue will be at different stages in the cell cycle.

Page 22: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle
Page 23: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Mitosis Stages

Put these in the correct order..

Page 24: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

The Guarantee of Mitosis…The 2 daughter cells formed are identical to each other and identical to the mother cell. Why is this so important?

Page 25: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Mitosis

Page 26: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Whitefish Blastula

Page 27: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Mitosis in Plant Cells

Page 28: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Onion Root Tip

Page 29: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Ch. 8: The Cell Cycle

Page 30: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Mitosis

Page 31: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Whitefish Blastula

Page 32: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Mitosis in Plant Cells

Page 33: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Onion Root Tip

Page 34: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Controls on the Cell Cycle:1. Cell Type: Some cells stop dividing

when mature (stay in G0) Ex: neurons & muscle cells2.Growth factors – protein that stimulates cell division3.Density-dependent inhibition (cell to cell contact) Cells stop growing when they touch other cells4.Anchorage (cells may required contact with a surface for cell division)

Page 35: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Cell Cycle Regulators:Intracellular factors:

1. Checkpoints & Cyclins: All chromosomes are replicated? All spindles are attached? Are there enough mitochondria, etc.. If cells “pass” these checkpoints, the next stage of cell cycle begins.

Cyclins = that start/stop cell cycle progression based on checkpoints

Extra-cellular factors: - Binding of growth factors- Cell to cell contact

Page 36: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Cell Cycle Regulators: Cyclins operate at

checkpoints

Page 37: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Cell Cycle Controls: External to Cell

Page 38: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Growing Out of Control: Cancer

• Cancer is a disease of the cell cycle• Cells do not respond normally to controls of the

cell cycle system• Tumor: abnormally growing mass of body

cells– Benign: abnormal cells remain at original sight

forming a lump; although can cause problems, normally can be fully removed by surgery

– Malignant: “cancerous” spread, displacing normal tissue and disrupting organ function

– Metastasis: spread of cancer cells via circulatory system transport (traveling cancer cells)

http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/understandingcancer/cancer/page2

Page 39: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Molecular Basis of Cancer:

• Tumor Suppressor Genes: - genes that normally halt the cell cycle

- problem if stuck “OFF” (cells keep dividing)

• Oncogenes: - genes that tell cells to divide

- problem if stuck “ON” (cells keep dividing)

Page 40: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Cancer categorized based on site of origin: (Not on

quiz)• Carcinoma: originate in internal or external

coverings of the body (skin or lining of intestine)

• Sarcoma: Arise in support tissue (bone or muscle)

• Leukemia: Arise in blood or bone marrow (abnormal number of white blood cells)

• Lymphoma: Arise in lymphatic cells of the immune system (lymph nodes or spleen)

Page 41: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Treating Cancer• Surgical removal of tumor

• Radiation: – Damages DNA in cancer cells more than normal

cell– Cancer cells do not have the ability to repair– Cancer cells die without dividing/reproducing

• Chemotherapy: (For widespread or metastatic tumors) – Chemicals that disrupt specific steps in the cell

cycle• freezes the mitotic spindle• prevents formation of spindle• Damage DNA or RNA involved in making growth factors

Page 42: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Controls on the Cell Cycle:

Some cells stop dividing when mature (stay in G0)

ex) many neurons (nerve) & muscle cells Others divide for growth & repair Influences of cell division:

Growth factors – protein that stimulates cell division Density-dependent inhibition (cell to cell contact)

Page 43: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Cell Cycle Regulators:• Proteins called cyclins start/stop the

cell cycle.• The cycle is regulate by various factors:

1. Intracellular factors (Checkpoints)- All chromosomes are replicated- All spindles are attached

2. Extra-cellular factors: - Binding of growth factors- Cell to cell contact

Page 44: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Growing Out of Control: Cancer

• a disease of the cell cycle• Cells do not respond normally to controls of the

cell cycle system• Tumor: abnormally growing mass of body

cells– Benign: abnormal cells remain at original sight

forming a lump; although can cause problems, normally can be fully removed by surgery

– Malignant: spread, displacing normal tissue and disrupting organ function

– Metastasis: spread of cancer cells via circulatory system transport

See slide show http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/understandingcancer/cancer/page2

Page 45: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Molecular Basis of Cancer:

• Tumor Suppressor Genes: - genes that normally halt the cell cycle

- problem if stuck “OFF” (cells keep dividing)

• Oncogenes: - genes that tell cells to divide

- problem if stuck “ON” (cells keep dividing)

Page 46: Ch. 8:  The Cell Cycle

Treating Cancer• Surgical removal of tumor

• Radiation: – Damages DNA in cancer cells more than normal

cell– Cancer cells do not have the ability to repair– Cancer cells die without dividing/reproducing

• Chemotherapy: (For widespread or metastatic tumors) – Chemicals that disrupt specific steps in the cell

cycle• freezes the mitotic spindle• prevents formation of spindle• Damage DNA or RNA involved in making growth factors


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