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MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University
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Page 1: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

MITOSIS

1

Dr. Susan MaskelWestern CT State University

Page 2: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Background Information

CHROMOSOMES

DNA proteins

deoxyribonucleic acid interspersed with DNA

stores genetic info controls processes

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Page 3: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

DNA

2 strands

double helix

sugars (deoxyribose)

phosphate groups

nitrogenous bases:adenine, thymine,guanine, cytosine

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Page 4: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Structure of Components of DNA

-O - P = O

O-

O

phosphate

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Page 5: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

DNA

S

S

S

S

P

P

P

B

B

B

B

B

B

B

B

S

S

S

S

P

P

P

PP

S B B S

Key:

S = sugar

P = phosphate

B = base

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Page 6: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

sugar-phosphate backbone

nitrogenous bases form “rungs of ladder”

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Page 7: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Nitrogenous Bases in DNA

• Adenine (A)

• Thymine (T)

• Cytosine (C)

• Guanine (G)

• Specificity of base pairing A - T C - G

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Page 9: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

DNA

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Page 10: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Types of Chromosomes

duplicated

(2 ds DNAs + protein)

unduplicated

(1 double stranded (ds) DNA + protein)

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Page 11: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Duplicated Chromosomes

DNA

sister chromatids

centromere

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Page 12: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Humans have 46 chromosomes in

their somatic cells (i.e., not sperm,

not egg)

Humans have 23 chromosomes in

their sex cells (i.e., egg or sperm)

diploid number = 2N = 46

haploid number = 1N = 23

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Page 13: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

not dividing dividing

At any given time, a cell is either:

The Cell Cycle13

Page 14: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

When NOT dividing: INTERPHASEG1 phase (growth phase 1)

normal cell metabolismsynthesis of proteins not used in mitosis

chromosomes are unduplicated

S phase (synthesis phase)normal cell metabolism

DNA synthesis (DNA replication or duplication)chromosomes go from unduplicated to duplicated

G2 phase (growth 2 phase)normal cell metabolism

synthesis of proteins needed for mitosischromosomes are duplicated

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Page 15: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

DNA Replication• DNA unzips

• New nucleotides (sugar-phosphate-base combina-tions) add according to specificity of base pairing

• 2 sister chromatids form; are identical

• each sister chromatid has 1 new & 1 old DNA strand

• semiconservative replication

sister chromatid

old strand

new strand

sister chromatid

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Page 16: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

When cells ARE dividing:MITOSIS

division of the nucleus of somatic cells; 1 divisionmaintains the chromosome number

1 mother cell with 46 chromosomes givesrise to 2 daughter cells, each with 46 chromosomes

MEIOSISdivision of the nucleus of sex cells; 2 divisions

halves the chromosome number1 mother cell with 46 chromosomes gives

rise to 4 daughter cells, each with 23 chromosomes

CYTOKINESISdivision of cytoplasm

occurs during mitosis & meiosis

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Page 17: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

CELL CYCLEINTERPHASE

G1: unduplicated chromosomes

S: chromosomes duplicateG2: duplicated chromosomes

MITOSIS (M phase)start with duplicated

chromosomes; end with unduplicated chromosomes

4 phases:Prophase

MetaphaseAnaphaseTelophase

(cytokinesis occurs mainly during telophase)

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Page 18: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

INTERPHASE

before mitosis begins; NOT part of mitosis

cell is not dividing

includes G1, S, G2 phases

nuclear membrane visible

nucleoli visible

chromatin in nucleus

- nuclear membrane intact- nucleolus visible- chromatin not visible as individual structures

NOTE:

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Page 19: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Interphase

nuclear membrane present chromatin not visible

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Page 20: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

MITOSISnuclear division of somatic cells

4 phases:Prophase

MetaphaseAnaphaseTelophase

cytokinesis – division of cytoplasm – occurs mainly during telophase

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Page 21: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

PROPHASElasts 1 – several hours

nuclear membrane disappears

nucleoli disappear

chromatin winds upon itself to form chromosomes; chromosomes are duplicated

centrioles made of microtubules; (replicated to form 2 pairs at end of G1); move to opposite poles of cell

spindle and asters form

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Page 22: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Spindle & Asters

aster

probably anchors

apparatus to cell

membrane

spindle

helps organize chromosomes during mitosis

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Page 23: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Prophase

In this hypothetical cell, 2 N = 4. In humans, 2 N = 46.

nuclear membrane disappears nucleolus disappearschromatin chromosomesspindle & asters form

NOTE:

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Page 24: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Prophase

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Page 25: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

METAPHASE5 – 15 minutes

chromosomes line up in single file along center of spindle

chromosomes are attached to spindle fibers in area of centromere

In this hypothetical cell, 2 N = 4. In humans, 2 N = 46.

chromosomes lined up in single file in center of spindle

NOTE:

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Page 26: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Metaphase26

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ANAPHASE2 – 10 minutes

spindle fibers pulled toward opposite poles of cell

centromere splits

sister chromatids pulled toward opposite poles of cell

In this hypothetical cell, 2 N = 4. In humans, 2 N = 46.

NOTE:

sister chromatids being pulled toward opposite poles

of cell

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Anaphase28

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TELOPHASE

10 – 30 minutes

cleavage furrow forms & deepens until cell divides into 2 daughter cells (cytokinesis)

opposite of prophase occurs:nuclear membrane & nucleoli reappear

chromosomes uncoil into chromatinspindle & asters disappear

In this hypothetical cell, 2 N = 4. In humans, 2 N = 46.

NOTE:

cleavage furrow forms;2 daughter cells will form; the

opposite of prophase will occur

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Telophase30

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Page 33: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE:Name the phase of mitosis seen on

the following slides.

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Page 34: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

1 2 3

45

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Page 35: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

1 2 3

4

1 prophase

2 anaphase

3 metaphase

4 telophase

5 anaphase

5

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Page 36: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

1 23

4 5

6

7

8

9

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1 23

4 5

6

7

8

9

1 prophase

2 telophase

3 anaphase

4 anaphase

5 metaphase

6 prophase

7 metaphase

8 metaphase

9 metaphase

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1

2

3

4

5

6

78

9

1011

12

13 14

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Page 39: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

1

2

3

4

5

6

78

9

1011

12

13 14

1 metaphase 8 late anaphase/ early telophase

2 telophase 9 anaphase

3 prophase 10 metaphase

4 anaphase 11 anaphase

5 anaphase 12 anaphase

6 prophase 13 metaphase

7 metaphase 14 prophase

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Page 40: MITOSIS 1 Dr. Susan Maskel Western CT State University.

Now it’s YOUR turn to identify stages of mitosis with a

microscope!

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