Top Banner
Cell Division Part One: Mitosis
31

Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Dec 29, 2015

Download

Documents

Annis Briggs
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Cell Division

Part One: Mitosis

Page 2: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

In this lesson…

• Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid

• List the steps of mitosis and describe what happens in each

• Identify what stage of mitosis a cell is in by looking at the chromosomes

• List three reasons cells divide by mitosis

• Describe cytokinesis

Page 3: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

In the nucleus

• In non-dividing cells, the genetic material is stored as thin DNA super coils called CHROMATIN

• When a cell divides, the chromatin will shorten and thicken into CHROMOSOMES

• One strand of a double stranded chromosome is called a CHROMATID

Page 4: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Mitosis

• MITOSIS: a process by which the nucleus of a cell divides while maintaining the chromosome number One cell two cells New cells have identical genetic material (DNA) of the parent cell

• Four stages of division (Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase and Telophase - PMAT) plus a period of growth and metabolism called Interphase

Page 5: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

The Cell Cycle

Page 6: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Interphase

• Period between divisions• Longest part of the cell cycle• Cell is growing and metabolizing• Nuclear membrane present• Genetic information in the form of chromatin and cannot be seen with a microscope

• Before division each strand of DNA will replicate (copy) itself to become double stranded

• Near the end of interphase the DNA begins to condense (shorten)

Page 7: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Interphase

Page 8: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Draw a double stranded chromosome. Label chromosome, chromatid and centromere

ChromosomeChromatid

Centromere

Chromatid

Page 9: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Phase One: Prophase

• Chromatin contracts and becomes visible (spaghetti). It is now called CHROMOSOMES

• Each is a double chromosome with a pair of SISTER chromatids which are joined to each other by a centromere

• Chromosomes begin to move towards the equator (center) of the cell

• Nuclear membrane disintegrates (breaks down)

• CENTRIOLES will form SPINDLE FIBERS that will attach to each centromere and move around the chromosomes

Page 10: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Prophase

Page 11: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Phase Two: Metaphase

• The centromeres of each chromosome line up along equator ( looks like praying hands)

• Centromeres divide so the doubled chromosomes become two identical single stranded sister chromatids

• Centrioles are now at the poles of the cell and are attached to each centromere by spindle fibers

Page 12: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Metaphase

Page 13: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Phase Three: Anaphase

• The spindle fibers begin to shorten and the chromosomes begin moving to opposite ends or poles of the cell (fingers)

• Each side gets one chromatid from each double stranded chromosome

Page 14: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Anaphase chromosomes

Page 15: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Phase Four: Telophase

• Begins when single stranded chromosomes reach the poles

• Chromosomes uncoil and turn into chromatin

• Nuclear membrane reappears• Reverse of prophase• Division of the cytoplasm or CYTOKINESIS is completed by pinching off in animals or by building a cell wall in plants

Page 16: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Telophase

Page 17: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

What’s the point of Mitosis?

• Mitosis creates identical copies of cells for: 1. growth

2. Repair/regeneration of damaged tissue

3. Asexual reproduction (animals) or vegetative reproduction (plants)

Page 18: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Asexual Reproduction

• Reproduction that involves only one parent; parent and offspring have identical genetics

• No special reproductive cells or organs used to create offspring

• Occurs through mitosis and cytokinesis• Both single and multi-celled organisms,

plants and simple animals can reproduce asexually

• In multi-cellular organisms, the offspring develop from undifferentiated, unspecialized cells from the parent

• Usually a rapid form of reproduction

Page 19: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Binary Fission

• Simplest form of asexual reproduction

• Parent divides into two approximately equal sized daughter cells

• Bacteria: circular chromosome attaches to plasma membrane then replicates, cell wall separates each copy

• Protozoa: eg. Amoeba become circular and use mitosis

Page 20: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Budding

• New individuals develop from small outgrowths of the parent (buds)

• May develop colonies (sponges) or break off to be individuals (hydra, yeast)

• Some organisms can both bud and reproduce sexually

Page 21: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Spores

• Specialized single cells that are released from the parent organism, germinate and grow by mitosis

• New cells differentiate to form a new organism

• Can reproduce quickly and in large quantities

• Often have thick protective coats• Eg. Fungi, algae, protozoa

Page 22: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Regeneration

• The ability to regrow lost body parts

• Some animals can regrow entire new organisms from parts

• Ability to regenerate decreases as organisms increase complexity

• Even simple organisms that can regenerate entire organisms generally prefer to utilize a

different method to reproduce

Page 23: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Vegetative reproduction

• MERISTEM: area on plant with unspecialized cells (cells that can become any kind of cell) that frequently divide using mitosis

• Meristematic cells can be found in the vegetative structures of a plant (roots, stems, leaves)

• Given proper treatment, meristem cells can reproduce mitoticlly then differentiate into new independent plants

• Structures include bulbs, corms, tubers, runners, rhizomes

• Can also be artificially propagated using cuttings, layerings or grafting

Page 24: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Bulb

• short underground stem with thickened storage leaves

• small new bulbs sprout from the old ones

• Eg. onions, tulips

Page 25: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Corm

• short underground stems with no fleshy leaves

• Eg. gladiolas, crocuses

Page 26: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Tuber

• enlarged part of an underground stem that contains stored food

• potatoes (eyes are tiny buds)

Page 27: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Runner

• AKA stolon• is a stem that runs sideways and contains

buds• Eg. strawberry

Page 28: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Rhizome

• a stem that grows sideways under the ground

• ferns, irises

Page 29: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Cutting

• a stem, root or leaf cutting used to make a new plant

Page 30: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Layering

• part of a stem is bent and covered in soil

• once it roots the original can be cut off

• Eg. raspberries, roses

Page 31: Cell Division Part One: Mitosis In this lesson… Explain the difference between double and single stranded chromosome, chromatin and chromatid List the.

Grafting

• stem or bud removed from one plant and permanently joined to another plant

• Eg. grapes and many seedless fruits