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Chapter 10 Cell Growth and Divison
26

Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

May 21, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Chapter 10

Cell Growth and Divison

Page 2: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

10.1 Cell growth, division, and reproduction

Limits to Cell SizeWe learned in Chapter 7, that small cells are more efficient than large cells.

•The larger a cell becomes, • the more demands the cell places on its DNA• the less efficient in moving nutrients and waste materials

across the cell membrane.

Page 3: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Cells need a high sa/v ratio

Page 4: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Cell Division

An adult produces 25 million new cells per second.

Why do cells divide?1. Asexual reproduction

2. Unicellular organism developing into a multicellular organism (growth)

3. Renewal and Repair of damaged cells

• In each situation DNA must be present in each new cell.

• When a cell divides the DNA is copied and distributed so that each cell ends up with an exact copy of the DNA.

Page 5: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Asexual Reproduction

• Prokaryotic cells reproduce by binary fission• Produces identical offspring where a parent passes exact copies

of its DNA to its offspring.

parent cell

DNA duplicates

cell begins to divide

daughter cells

Page 6: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Asexual reproduction

Eukaryotic organisms can also reproduce asexually.• Budding forms a new organism from a small projection

growing on the surface of the parent.• Fragmentation is the splitting of the parent into

pieces that each grow into a new organism.

bud

Hydra

Yeast

Page 7: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Sexual reproduction

• Involves the fusion of two parent cells• Offspring inherit some information from each

parent

Page 8: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

10.2 THE PROCESS OF CELL DIVISION

CHROMOSOMES – condensed chromatin•A single molecule of DNA has thousands of genes•DNA is arranged into chromosomes

• Prokaryotes – single circular chromosome in cytoplasm• Eukaryotes – multiple chromosomes are located in the nucleus

Page 9: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Eukaryotic Chromosomes

• Each chromosome is made up of 2 sister chromatids

• The sister chromatids are attached at a centromere

Condensed, duplicated chromosome

chromatid

centromere

Page 10: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Chromosomes in Sexual Reproduction

• Somatic Cell – normal body cell, not a sperm or egg cell.• Diploid• In a normal human contains 46 chromosomes

• Gamete – sex cell, sperm or egg• Haploid • In a normal human contains 23 chromosomes• Why?

• When two haploid gametes fuse in fertilization, the result is a diploid zygote (the first cell of a new individual).

Page 11: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

The Cell Cycle

The cell cycle is a regular pattern of growth, DNA replication, and cell division.

Page 12: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Stages of the Cell Cycle

• Interphase• G1: cell growth and normal

functions• S (synthesis): copies DNA• G2: additional growth and

preparation for division

• Cell Division (M phase)• Mitosis

• division of the cell nucleus

• Cytokinesis • division of the cell cytoplasm

Page 13: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

interphase

Before cell division can begin the cell will go through interphase.

Parent cell in Interphase

centrioles

spindle fibers

centrosome

nucleus withDNA

Page 14: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Steps of Mitosis

• Step I: Prophase• chromosomes condense • Spindle fibers form from centrioles.• Nucleolus disappears and the nuclear envelope breaks down

Page 15: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

• Step 2: Metaphase• Centromeres of chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell• Spindles attach to centromeres

Page 16: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

• Step 3: Anaphase• sister chromatids separate and move along the spindle fibers to

opposite sides of the cell

Page 17: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

• Step 4: Telophase the new nuclear envelopes form and chromosomes begin

to uncoil into chromatinMitosis is complete! (cell division still has one more step)

Page 18: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Cytokinesis

• In animal cells, the membrane pinches closed.

Page 19: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

• After cytokinesis in all cells, each new cell begins interphase.

• Cells Alive Animation

• In plant cells, a cell plate forms.

Page 20: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division
Page 21: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Review Questions

Compare asexual and sexual reproduction.How does cytokinesis compare in plant and animal cells?Describe the relationship between the following terms: chromatin, chromosomes, chromatid, and centromere.

Mitosis song

Page 22: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

10.3 regulating the Cell Cycle

• One of the most important internal factors that regulate the cell cycle are: • Cyclins (regulatory proteins)

Page 23: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

External Factor• Normal cells stop

dividing when they touch each other.

Page 24: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Cancer cells

• If one of these factors is mutated regulation of growth and division can be disrupted.

• Cancer cells do not respond normally to the bodys control mechanisms.• As a result they divide uncontrollably and form a mass

of cells called a tumor.

Metastasis Animation

Page 25: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

10.4 Cell Differentiation

• As a zygote grows into stem cells, and then an embryo, the cells become specialized through the process of differentiation.• Differentiated cells are specialized

to perform certain jobs.• Example: nerve cells, muscle cell,

blood cell, skin cell

Page 26: Chapter 10 notes - Cell Growth and Division

Stem Cell Research

• Embryonic stem cells vs. adult stem cells

• Benefits• Fix damaged cells• Treat devastating

diseases (leukemia, diabetes)

• Issues• Ethics• Expensive