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The Tragic Ending

The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

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Page 1: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

The Tragic Ending

Page 2: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Cell Division in Eukaryotes• As you are sitting in class now, your

cells are growing, dividing and dying.

Cuts and bruises are healing

RBC’s are being produced in your bones at a rate of 10-15 million per sec.Muscle cells are

get larger when you exercise.

Worn out cells in the palm of your hand are being replaced.

Page 3: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Cell Division

How do you grow?

The number of cells in your body is increasing!!

Page 4: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

How Do Cells Increase In Number?

• In your body, all of your cells, except your sex cells, divide by a process called mitosis.

• In mitosis, a parent cell divides to form two identical daughter cells.

• The daughter cells have the same contents of the parent’s nucleus.

Page 5: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Cell Cycle

• Most of a eukaryotic cell’s life is spent in a phase called interphase.

• Interphase consists of three stages: G1, S, and G2 – G1: a time of growth and maintenance– S: DNA is replicated: this commits the

cell to divide– G2: more growth as the cell prepares

for division

.

Page 6: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Cell Cycle • Mitosis: division of the nucleus: – Four phases: prophase,

metaphase, anaphase and telephase.

• Cytokinesis: division of the cytoplasm

• After the cell divides into 2 identical daughter cells, the cycle starts over again.

http://www.cellsalive.com/cell_cycle.htm

Page 7: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Cell Cycle

Page 8: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Interphase• Chromatin coils up into chromosomes

• A copy of each chromosome in the nucleus is produced

• These duplicated chromosomes are held together by a centromere.

• Cells that no longer divide are always in interphase.

Page 9: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Interphase

Page 10: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Mitosis in Animal Cells• A form of asexual

reproduction• The nucleus of a cell

divides, producing 2 nuclei that are identical to each other

• Has 4 phases: prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase

Page 11: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Prophase• Duplicated chromosomes become fully visible• Organelles called centrioles move to opposite ends of

the cell• The nucleolus and nuclear membrane disintegrate• Threadlike spindles stretch across the cell between

the centrioles

Page 12: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Prophase

Page 13: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Metaphase• Duplicated chromosomes line up across the

center, or equator, of the cell.

• Each centromere attaches to 2 spindle fibers

Page 14: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Metaphase

Page 15: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Anaphase

• Each centromere splits and the identical chromosomes separate and move towards opposite ends of the cell.

Page 16: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Anaphase

Page 17: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Telophase• Spindle fibers disappear

• Chromosomes uncoil and are harder to see

• A nuclear membrane forms around each mass of chromosomes

• A new nucleolus forms in each new nucleus

Page 18: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Telophase

Page 19: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Cytokinesis• The cytoplasm and its contents divide

into 2 individual daughter cells.

• Each daughter contains a nucleus and identical chromosomes.

Page 20: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Virtual Lab

• Cell Reproduction

• http://bio.rutgers.edu/~gb101/virtuallabs_101.html

Page 21: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Mitosis in Plant Cells• What’s Different?• Plant Cells do not have centrioles

• A cell plate forms between 2 new nuclei

• New cell walls form along the cell plate, and new cell membranes form inside the cell walls.

Page 22: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Plant Mitosis

Page 23: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

"And do you, Michelle, take Andrew until mitosis do you part?"

Page 24: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing
Page 25: The Tragic Ending. Cell Division in Eukaryotes As you are sitting in class now, your cells are growing, dividing and dying. Cuts and bruises are healing

Chromosomes

-The other two chromosomes, X and Y, are the sex chromosomes. The above picture of the human chromosomes lined up in pairs is called a karyotype.

-The 22 autosomes are numbered by size.