Top Banner
Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer Unit 5b
38

Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Jan 01, 2016

Download

Documents

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: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Regulation of the Cell Cycle

Asexual Reproduction

Cancer

Unit 5b

Page 2: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Cell division in our life cycle.

2

Page 3: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

3

Telomeres

Page 4: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

4

Page 5: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

5

Cell CycleM

(mitosis)

G1(Gap 1)

G2(Gap 2)

S(DNA

Synthesis)

Cells that cease

division

Page 6: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

a protective section of DNA at the end of each chromosome.

get shorter every time the cell divides.

Cyclin

6

Telomeres

Page 7: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

7

Regulation of the Cell CycleCdk 

MPF P53 

P27 

Page 8: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

When the telomere becomes too short, the cell dies.

Cells that rebuild the telomere with each division can become cancerous

8

Page 9: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Some chromosomes are circular, others are linear.

9

Page 10: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

10

Page 11: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

genetic information is carried in a single, circular chromosome.

DNA is attached at one site to the cell membrane.

11

Prokaryotes

Page 12: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

much more DNA than Prokaryotes.

genetic information is organized into linear chromosomes.

float freely in the nucleus.

12

Eukaryotes

Page 13: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Asexual Reproduction

13

Page 14: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

One parent

Same genetic blueprint as the parent (clone)

14

Asexual Reproduction

Page 15: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Binary Fission Budding Parthenogenesis Regeneration Rhizomes Spore Formation Cloning

15

Asexual Reproduction

Page 16: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

16

Page 17: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.
Page 18: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.
Page 19: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.
Page 20: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.
Page 21: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

21

Advantages and Disadvantages of Asexual Reproduction

Page 22: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Asexual Reproduction in Organisms

Dolly the Cloned Sheep

Page 23: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

23

How might telomere length be affected in a cloned animal like “Dolly” the sheep?

1. Telomeres might be longer than normal.

2. Telomeres might be shorter than normal.

3. Telomeres might be of normal length.

4. No telomeres would be present.

Page 24: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Binary fission - Bacteria. The circular chromosome duplicates itself and the cell splits into two identical new cells.

Budding - grow directly on the body of the parent. It eventually breaks off and establishes itself as a new, separate organism.

Regeneration - part of the parent's body breaks off and grows into a complete, new organism.

Rhizomes - Some plants (strawberries, potatoes, certain types of grass, etc) form runners that spread out from the parent plant to form plantlets at their ends.

24

Asexual Reproduction

Page 25: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Spore formation - fungi and some algae develop into a new organism after dispersal. 

Parthenogenesis - the development of an egg that has not been fertilized into an individual. Animals like most kinds of wasps, bees, and ants that have no sex

Page 26: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

asexual reproduction are genetically identical copies, or clones, of the parent.

Cloning of mammals

Dolly the sheep

Cloning

Page 27: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Cell division out of control means cancer.

27

Page 28: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

28

Cancer

Page 29: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

29

“Cancer cells are those which have forgotten

how to die.”—Harold Pinter

Page 30: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Cancer unrestrained cell growth and division

can lead to tumors

second leading cause of death in the United States

30

Page 31: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Tumor Growth unregulated cell division

31

Page 32: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Cancer cells have several features that distinguish them from normal cells, including…

32

Page 33: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Benign and Malignant Tumors

33

Page 34: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

What is cancer?

Contact Inhibition

How does it cause death?

34

Page 35: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

35

Page 36: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Why is the treatment for cancer often considered as bad as the disease?

36

Page 37: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

Chemotherapy and radiation affect cancer cells and normal cellsBoth treatments affect cells that are actively dividing.

37

Page 38: Regulation of the Cell Cycle Asexual Reproduction Cancer.

CancerUnrestrained cell growth and division.

Large masses of cells called malignant tumors that can cause serious health problems.

Treatment focuses on killing or slowing the division of the cells using chemotherapy and/or radiation.

38