1 / 56

Reproduction

Reproduction. Mitosis & Meiosis. Cell Division. basis of reproduction in every organism unicellular organisms cell division reproduces entirely new organisms allows organisms to develop from one fertilized egg cell into a multicellular organism of 60 trillion cells

Download Presentation

Reproduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reproduction Mitosis & Meiosis

  2. Cell Division • basis of reproduction in every organism • unicellular organisms • cell division reproduces entirely new organisms • allows organisms to develop from one fertilized egg cell into a multicellular organism of 60 trillion cells • allows for repair & replacement of worn out cells

  3. DNA • body must have a way to ensure that each time a cell divides information is maintained & directly copied • information is found in chromosomes • can only be seen clearly during cell division • remainder of the time exists as mass of very long fibers -chromatin • composed of DNA & proteins • each chromosome = one long DNA molecule containing thousands of genes • genes carry specific information

  4. Chromosomes • genes are found on chromosomes in the nucleus • number of chromosomes is specific to a species • human cells except ovum & sperm have 46 chromosomes • dog cells have 78

  5. Chromosomes • during cell division genetic material makes an exact duplicate of itself resulting in a chromosome containing two identical copies or sister chromatids • joined by a centromere • when cell divides chromatids separate • one goes to one daughter cell • other to another daughter cell • resulttwo cells with identical genetic material

  6. Cell Cycle • ordered sequence of events that begins when cell is formed & continues until cell divides • two broad stages • interphase • growing stage • mitotic phase • cell division stage

  7. Interphase • 90% of cycle • cell metabolizes & performs its job • normal functions are performed • cell prepares for cell division • everything in cytoplasm is doubled • cell increases in size • chromosomes duplicate

  8. Substages of Interphase • G1 phase • S phase • G2 phase

  9. G1 Phase • mitochondria, cytoskeletal elements, ER, ribosomes, Golgi membranes & cytosol are made in quantities for two cells • continues until G2 stage • centrioles begin to replicate • may last hours, days, weeks, or months

  10. S Phase • 6-8 hours • chromosomes duplicate • DNA replicates

  11. G2 Phase • 2-5 hours • last minute protein synthesis • completion of centriole replication • each chromosome consists of 2 identical sister chromatids linked by a centromere

  12. Mitotic Phase • M phase • cell divides • produces two identical daughters cell • can be divided into two stages • Mitosis • nuclear division • duplicated DNA is separated into 2 nuclei • sister chromatids separate at centromere • one goes into each of two daughter cells • Cytokinesis • cytoplasm divides into two cells

  13. Cytokinesis • cytoplasm division • animal cells-cleavage • first sign-appearance of cleavage furrow • microfilaments surround cell • pulled tight to divide cytoplasm • plant cells • cell plate forms inside cell & grows outward • eventually new piece of wall divides cell into two

  14. Stages of Mitosis • mitosis is continuous • divided into four main stages • Prophase • Metaphase • Anaphase • Telophase

  15. Interphase • mitosis begin after interphase

  16. Prophase • begins when chromosomes coil tightly. • become visible as individual structures • there are 2 copies of each chromosome • each termed a sister chromatid • connected by centromere • as chromosomes appearnucleoli disappear

  17. Prometaphase • nuclear envelope disappears • spindle fibers form among chromosomes • kinetochore of each chromatid attaches to spindle fiber • centrioles begin to move to opposite poles due to spindle fibers

  18. Metaphase • mitotic spindle fully formed • chromosomes line up on metaphase plate

  19. Anaphase • begins when centromereof each chromosome come apartseparating sister chromatids • kinetochores move daughter chromosomes to opposite poles of cell • ends when complete collection of chromosomes has reached poles of cell

  20. Telophase • nuclear membrane forms • nuclei enlarge • chromosomes uncoil • chomatin filaments form while nucleoli reappear • mitosis is completed • cells prepare to return to interphase • in order to make two complete cells cytoplasm must divide • Cytokinesis • usually takes place at same time as telophase

  21. Identify the Stages of Mitosis

  22. Meiosis Reduction Division

  23. Chromosomes • every nucleus in every somatic cell carries genetic blueprint • 46 chromosomes • each paired with a like chromosome • 23 pairs • 23 chromosomes came from our mothers • 23 from our fathers

  24. Homologous Chromosomes • pairs of chromosomes are homologous • carry same genes • genes code for a particular trait • come in several forms or alleles • genes may be alike • Homozygous • genes may be unlike • Heterozygous

  25. Diploid & Haploid • cells containing 23 pairs of chromosomes are diploid • abbreviated-2n • 2n = 46 • all cells in human body are diploid with exception of gametes • sperm & egg cells • have haploid number • half number in diploid cell • 23 chromosomes • n = 23 • during fertilization gametes fuse producing diploid zygote which develops into a diploid organism • haploid gametes keep chromosome number from doubling in each generation • gametes are made by a special type of cell division-meiosis or reduction division

  26. Meiosis • basis of sexual reproduction • reduction division • cells produced contain half number of chromosomes as typical body cell • one diploid cell4 haploid cells • occurs in stages • many resemble stages of mitosis • preceded by replication of chromosomes • followed by two successive nuclear divisions: meiosis I (reduction) & meiosis II (division)

  27. Phases of Meiosis I • interphase • prophase I • metaphase I • anaphase I • telophase I • cytokinesis

  28. Interphase • chromosomes duplicate • end of stage chromosomes are composed of two attached, identical sister chromatids • centrosomes have duplicated

  29. Prophase I • chromatin coils up so individual chromosomes become visible • homologous chromosomes-each composed of two chromatids pair up • forms a tetrad • composed of 2 chromatids forming thick, 4-strand structure • spindle starts to form between them

  30. Crossing Over • during prophase I synapsis forms • crossing over • chromatids break • become reattached to different homologous chromosomes • rearranges genetic information • important to producing variability

  31. Metaphase I • tetrads line up on metaphase plate • sister chromatids still attached by centromeres • spindle fibers are attached to kinetochores at centromere region of each homologous chromosome pair

  32. Anaphase I • tetrads separate • drawn to oppositepoles by spindle fibers • centromeres remain intact so each pole has two chromosomes attached to centromere • only tetrad has separated

  33. Telophase I • chromosomes arrive at poles of cell • each in duplicate form • cytokinesis usually takes place at same time

  34. Meiosis II • essentially same as mitosis

  35. Prophase II & Metaphase II • Prophase II • nuclear envelope (if formed) dissolves • spindle fibers form moving chromosomes to middle of cell • Metaphase II • spindles move chromosomes to metaphase plate with kinetochores of sister chromatids of each chromosome pointing to opposite poles

  36. Anaphase II & Telophase II • anaphase II • centromeres of sister chromatids separate • move toward opposite poles of cell • telophase II • nuclear envelopes form at the poles • cytokinesis • occurs at same time

  37. Genetic Variation • like begets like • truer of asexual than sexual reproduction • in sexually reproducing species like does not exactly beget like • none of you look exactly like your parents • none of your siblings look exactly like you • unless you are an identical twin • each offspring inherits a unique combination of genes from parents producing unique combinations of traits • genetic variability is due to two factors

  38. Genetic Variation • half your chromosomes came from your father • half came from your mother • giving you 46 • when you produce sperm or egg cells with a haploid number of chromosomes some gametes got your mom’s chromosome & some your dad’s • metaphase I-each homologous pair of chromosomes aligns on metaphase plate • orientation of homologous pair to poles is random • there are 4 possible gametes that could form • this is true if an organism has only two pair of chromosomes • humans have 23 pairs • an independent orientation at metaphase 1 • total neach has umber of combinations of chromosomes equals 2n • for humans with 23 pairs of chromosomes this works out to 8 million possible chromosome combinations

  39. Genetic Variation • also due to crossing over • during prophase I-synapsis of chromosomes occurs • genetic information is exchanged between pairs of homologous chromosomes • segment of one chromatid changes places with same segment of its homologous chromosome • results in new genetic combinations • offspring inherit gene combinations totally different from those inherited from previous generations

  40. Genetic Variation • Fertilization • contributes to genetic variability • any egg may be fertilized by any sperm • one egg represents one of eight million possibilities being fertilized • sperm represents one of eight million possibilities • resulting zygote has any one of 64 trillion possible combinations

  41. Chromosomal Abnormalities • mistakes can occur in meiosis • detected using a diagnostic tool known as a karyotype

  42. Aneuploidy • aberrant number of chromosomes • usual cause-non disjunction of paired homologous chromosomes • anaphase lag • one chromosome lags behind another and is left out of newly formed cell nucleus resulting in one daughter cell with a normal chromosome number and one with a deficiency of one called monosomy • not compatible with life • polysomy • too many chromosomes • autosomal polysomay may result in a viable fetus but is nearly always associated with severely disability • extra or missing sex chromosomes • more common & less debilitating • radiation, viruses & chemicals • all been implicated in chromosomal abnormalities • advanced maternal age is known to increase risk of chromosome number abnormality Down Syndrome

  43. Trisomy 21-Down Syndrome • extra 21st chromosome • most common chromosomal disorder • leading cause of mental challenges • occurs in 1/700 live births • first described-1866 • mental retardation • protruding tongues • low set ears • poor muscle tone • short stature • epicanthal folds • flat face • often congenital heart deformities • increased susceptibility to respiratory infections and leukemia • ¾ of fetuses with syndrome are still born or miscarried

  44. Sex Chromosome Disorders • unusual number of sex chromosomes • typically has less debilitating symptoms than extra autosomal chromosomes • may be because Y chromosome carries few genes

  45. Klinefelter Syndrome • extra X chromosome-XXY • 1/2000 live births • abnormal sexual development • not diagnosed until puberty • secondary sex characteristics do not develop • boy lacks testosterone leading to infertility • physically child is tall with long arms & legs • has female hair distribution, breast enlargement and a high pitched voice • testosterone therapy reduces feminine characteristics

More Related