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Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction
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Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Ms. Dunlap

Cell Growth and Reproduction

Page 2: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

DO NOWQ1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells?Q2: What are the two main

reasons why cells divide?A1: Cells increase in number

A2: Stay Tuned!!

Page 3: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

The Big Idea• You are constantly changing

• Worn out cells get replaced

• Cuts and bruises heal

• 2-3 billion red blood cells get replaced each second

• Muscles you exercise get larger

Page 4: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

The Cell CycleCell

Division

Interphase

Growth and Development

Preparing for reproduction

Page 5: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Cell Growth

Page 6: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

There are two main reasons why cells divide

1. The larger the cell becomes, the more demands there are on the DNA

2. The cell has trouble moving enough nutrients and wastes across the cell membrane

Page 7: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Division of a cell• Before it gets too large, a growing

cell divides forming two daughter cells

• The process by which a cell divides into two new daughter cells is called cell division

Page 8: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Daughter cells

Page 9: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

This solves the two problems of a growing cell

1. The cell replicates all of its DNA

2. The actual division of the cell decreases its volume

Page 10: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Cell Division

Page 11: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

In eukaryotes cell division occurs in two main stages

1. Mitosis

2. Cytokinesis

Page 12: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Chromosomes• In eukaryotic cells, the genetic

information that is passed on from one generation to the next is carried on ___________________________Chromosomes

Page 13: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.
Page 14: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

• Chromosomes are made of DNA – which carries the cells coded information – and proteins

• The cells of every organism have a specific number of chromosomes

• You can’t see chromosomes except during cell division, when they condense and compact

Page 15: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.
Page 16: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

• Before cell division, each chromosome is replicated, or copied

• Because of this, each chromosome consists of two identical _______________________________

• When the cell divides, the sister chromatids separate and one chromatid goes to each of the two new cells

• Each pair of chromatids are attached at an area called the centromere

“sister chromatids”

Page 17: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Interphase• “In-between” period of growth

between division

Page 18: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

• During the cell cycle, a cell grows, prepares for division, and divides to form two daughter cells, each of which then begins the cycle again

• The cell cycle consists of 4 phases

1. M phase

2. G1 phase

3. S phase

4. G2 phase

Page 19: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.
Page 20: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

• G1 – Cells do most of their growing. They increase in size and make new proteins and organelles

• S – Chromosomes are replicated

• G2 – Organelles and molecules required for cell division are produced

• M – cell divides

Page 21: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

DO NOW-SILENTLY

1. Which is a factor that limits cell size

a. How active a cell is

b. What kind of activity the cell is engaged in

c. The ratio of volume to cell surface area

d. Whether the plant is an animal or plant cell

e. Whether the cell is a prokaryote or eukaryote

2. Using previous knowledge, what are the 2 fundamental differences between meiosis and mitosis. Answer scientifically.

Page 22: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Inquiry Question-Knowing when to Stop

Suppose you had a paper cut on your finger. Although the cut may have bled and stung a little, after a few days, it will have disappeared, and your finger would be good as new. Think about these questions….

Page 23: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

…Knowing when to Stop

1. How do you think the body repairs an injury, such as a cut on a finger?

2. How long do you think this repair process continues?

3. What do you think causes the cells to stop the repair process?

Page 24: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Prophase• The chromatin

condenses into chromosomes

• The centrioles separate

• A spindle begins to form

• The nuclear membrane breaks down

Page 25: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Metaphase• Chromosomes

line up down the middle of the cell

• Each chromosome is connected to a spindle fiber at its centromere

Page 26: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Anaphase• Centromeres

split, allowing sister chromatids to separate

• The chromosomes move to opposite ends of the cell

Page 27: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Telophase• Chromosomes

unwind

• A nuclear membrane reforms

• Nucleolus becomes visable

Page 28: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Cytokinesis (In animals…)

Page 29: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Cytokinesis (In plants)• A cell plate gradually develops

into a separating membrane

• A cell wall then begins to appear in the cell plate

Page 30: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Golgi vesicles move toward equator

Early cell plate

Cell Plate

Page 31: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

The Big Picture!• Mitosis is the division of a

___________

• Mitosis produces two nuclei that have the __________ number of chromosomes as the original

same

nucleus

Page 32: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

46 46

46 (Before Mitosis)

(After Mitosis)

Page 33: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.
Page 34: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.
Page 35: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

10-3 Regulating the Cell Cycle

Page 36: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Controls on Cell Division

Page 37: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Controls on Cell Division• When cells come into contact with

other cells, they respond by not growing

• When an injury such as a cut occurs, cells at the edges of the injury are stimulated to divide rapidly, the cell division stops when the healing process is complete

Page 38: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

A sample of cytoplasm is removed from a cell in mitosis.

The sample is injected into a second cell in G2 of interphase.

As a result, the second cell enters mitosis.

Page 39: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Cyclins• Protein that regulates the cell

cycle

• There are 2 types of regulatory proteins; those that occur inside the cell and those that occur outside the cell.

Page 40: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Internal Regulators• Allow the cell cycle to proceed only

when certain processes have happened inside the cell

• Ex.) several regulatory proteins make sure that a cell does not go through mitosis until all chromosomes have been replicated

Page 41: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

External Regulators• Direct cells to speed up or slow

down the cell cycle• Ex.) growth factors• Molecules found on the surface of

neighboring cells often have the opposite effect causing cells to slow down or stop their cell cycles

• These signals prevent excessive cell growth

Page 42: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Cancer• A disorder in which some of the body’s

own cells lose the ability to control growth

• When cells divide uncontrollably, masses of cells called tumors can damage the surrounding tissues

• Cancer cells may break loose from the tumors and spread throughout the body

*(DNA interactive DVD)*

Page 43: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Q: What causes the loss of growth control?

A: smoking tobacco, radiation and chemical exposure, viral infections

All cancers have one thing in common: The control over the cell cycle has been broken

• Some cancer cells will no longer respond to external growth regulators

• Others fail to produce the internal regulators

Page 44: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

p53• An astonishing number of cancer cells

have a defect in a gene called p53• p53 normally halts the cell cycle until

all the chromosomes have been properly replicated

• if we could fix p53 we could cure many forms of cancer

Page 45: Ms. Dunlap Cell Growth and Reproduction. DO NOW Q1: When a living thing grows, what happens to its cells? Q2: What are the two main reasons why cells.

Is a cure in sight?• Cancer is a serious disease

• As difficult as a cure would be, at least scientists know where to start

• Cancer is a disease of the cell cycle , and conquering cancer will require a much deeper understanding of the processes that control cell division