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Cell Division: The Key Process in Life

This chapter provides an overview of cell division and its importance in the continuity of life. It covers the roles of cell division in reproduction, growth and development, and tissue renewal. The process of cell division ensures that each daughter cell receives an exact copy of the genetic material. The chapter also discusses the cellular organization of genetic material, distribution of chromosomes during cell division, and the phases of the cell cycle. Additionally, it explores the mitotic phase and interphase, as well as the mitotic spindle and cytokinesis.

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Cell Division: The Key Process in Life

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  1. Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle

  2. Figure 12.1 • Overview: The Key Roles of Cell Division • The continuity of life • Is based upon the reproduction of cells, or cell division

  3. 100 µm (a) Reproduction. An amoeba, a single-celled eukaryote, is dividing into two cells. Each new cell will be an individual organism (LM). Figure 12.2 A • Unicellular organisms • Reproduce by cell division

  4. 200 µm 20 µm (b) Growth and development. This micrograph shows a sand dollar embryo shortly after the fertilized egg divided, forming two cells (LM). (c) Tissue renewal. These dividing bone marrow cells (arrow) will give rise to new blood cells (LM). Figure 12.2 B, C • Multicellular organisms depend on cell division for • Development from a fertilized cell • Growth • Repair

  5. The cell division process • Is an integral part of the cell cycle

  6. Concept 12.1: Cell division results in genetically identical daughter cells • Cells duplicate their genetic material • Before they divide, ensuring that each daughter cell receives an exact copy of the genetic material, DNA

  7. Cellular Organization of the Genetic Material • A cell’s endowment of DNA, its genetic information • Is called its genome

  8. Figure 12.3 50 µm • The DNA molecules in a cell • Are packaged into chromosomes

  9. Eukaryotic chromosomes • Consist of chromatin, a complex of DNA and protein that condenses during cell division • In animals • Somatic cells have two sets of chromosomes • Gametes have one set of chromosomes

  10. Distribution of Chromosomes During Cell Division • In preparation for cell division • DNA is replicated and the chromosomes condense

  11. 0.5 µm A eukaryotic cell has multiplechromosomes, one of which is represented here. Before duplication, each chromosomehas a single DNA molecule. Chromosomeduplication(including DNA synthesis) Once duplicated, a chromosomeconsists of two sister chromatidsconnected at the centromere. Eachchromatid contains a copy of the DNA molecule. Centromere Sisterchromatids Separation of sister chromatids Mechanical processes separate the sister chromatids into two chromosomes and distribute them to two daughter cells. Centromeres Sister chromatids Figure 12.4 • Each duplicated chromosome • Has two sister chromatids, which separate during cell division

  12. Eukaryotic cell division consists of • Mitosis, the division of the nucleus • Cytokinesis, the division of the cytoplasm • In meiosis • Sex cells are produced after a reduction in chromosome number

  13. Concept 12.2: The mitotic phase alternates with interphase in the cell cycle • A labeled probe can reveal patterns of gene expression in different kinds of cells

  14. INTERPHASE S(DNA synthesis) G1 CytokinesisMitosis G2 MITOTIC(M) PHASE Figure 12.5 Phases of the Cell Cycle • The cell cycle consists of • The mitotic phase • Interphase

  15. Interphase can be divided into subphases • G1 phase • S phase • G2 phase

  16. The mitotic phase • Is made up of mitosis and cytokinesis

  17. G2 OF INTERPHASE PROMETAPHASE PROPHASE Centrosomes(with centriole pairs) Aster Fragmentsof nuclearenvelope Early mitoticspindle Kinetochore Chromatin(duplicated) Centromere Nonkinetochoremicrotubules Kinetochore microtubule Chromosome, consistingof two sister chromatids Nuclearenvelope Plasmamembrane Nucleolus Figure 12.6 • Mitosis consists of five distinct phases • Prophase • Prometaphase

  18. METAPHASE ANAPHASE TELOPHASE AND CYTOKINESIS Metaphaseplate Cleavagefurrow Nucleolusforming Nuclear envelopeforming Daughter chromosomes Centrosome at one spindle pole Spindle Figure 12.6 • Metaphase • Anaphase • Telophase

  19. The Mitotic Spindle: A Closer Look • The mitotic spindle • Is an apparatus of microtubules that controls chromosome movement during mitosis

  20. The spindle arises from the centrosomes

  21. Aster Centrosome MetaphasePlate Sisterchromatids Kinetochores Overlappingnonkinetochoremicrotubules Kinetochores microtubules 0.5 µm Microtubules Chromosomes Figure 12.7 Centrosome 1 µm • Some spindle microtubules

  22. EXPERIMENT 1 The microtubules of a cell in early anaphase were labeled with a fluorescent dye that glows in the microscope (yellow). Kinetochore Spindlepole Figure 12.8 • In anaphase, sister chromatids separate • And move toward opposite ends of the cell

  23. In telophase • Genetically identical daughter nuclei form at opposite ends of the cell

  24. Cleavage furrow 100 µm Contractile ring of microfilaments Daughter cells Figure 12.9 A (a) Cleavage of an animal cell (SEM) Cytokinesis: A Closer Look • In animal cells • Cytokinesis occurs by a process known as cleavage, forming a cleavage furrow

  25. Vesiclesforming cell plate Wall of patent cell 1 µm Cell plate New cell wall Daughter cells Figure 12.9 B (b) Cell plate formation in a plant cell (SEM) • In plant cells, during cytokinesis • A cell plate forms

  26. 2 3 5 1 4 Chromatinecondensing Nucleus Chromosome Nucleolus Metaphase. The spindle is complete,and the chromosomes,attached to microtubulesat their kinetochores, are all at the metaphase plate. Prophase. The chromatinis condensing. The nucleolus is beginning to disappear.Although not yet visible in the micrograph, the mitotic spindle is staring to from. Prometaphase.We now see discretechromosomes; each consists of two identical sister chromatids. Laterin prometaphase, the nuclear envelop will fragment. Telophase. Daughternuclei are forming. Meanwhile, cytokinesishas started: The cellplate, which will divided the cytoplasm in two, is growing toward the perimeterof the parent cell. Anaphase. Thechromatids of each chromosome have separated, and the daughter chromosomesare moving to the ends of cell as their kinetochoremicrotubles shorten. Figure 12.10 • Mitosis in a plant cell

  27. Binary Fission • Prokaryotes (bacteria) • Reproduce by a type of cell division called binary fission

  28. Origin of replication Cell wall Plasma Membrane E. coli cell Bacterial Chromosome Two copies of origin Chromosome replication begins. Soon thereafter, one copy of the origin moves rapidly toward the other end of the cell. 1 Replication continues. One copy ofthe origin is now at each end of the cell. 2 Origin Origin Replication finishes. The plasma membrane grows inward, and new cell wall is deposited. 3 4 Two daughter cells result. • In binary fission • The bacterial chromosome replicates • The two daughter chromosomes actively move apart Figure 12.11

  29. The Evolution of Mitosis • Since prokaryotes preceded eukaryotes by billions of years • It is likely that mitosis evolved from bacterial cell division • Certain protists • Exhibit types of cell division that seem intermediate between binary fission and mitosis carried out by most eukaryotic cells

  30. 4 3 2 1 Lymphvessel Tumor Bloodvessel Glandular tissue Cancer cell MetastaticTumor A small percentage of cancer cells may survive and establish a new tumor in another part of the body. Cancer cells spread through lymph and blood vessels to other parts of the body. A tumor grows from a single cancer cell. Cancer cells invade neighboring tissue. • Malignant tumors invade surrounding tissues and can metastasize • Exporting cancer cells to other parts of the body where they may form secondary tumors Figure 12.19

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