chapter 8 the cellular basis of reproduction and inheritance sexual reproduction mitosis asexual...

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CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduct ion mitosis asexual reproduct ion meiosi s

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Page 1: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

CHAPTER 8

The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and InheritanceSexual

reproduction

mitosis

asexual reproducti

on

meiosis

Page 2: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic• Binary fission• Cell divides in half• Chromosome

replicates & attaches to plasma membrane

• 2 copies will be separated by growth that occurs between them

• 2 identical cells form

• Genes grouped into chromosomes (long thread-like structures)

• Cell duplicates chromosomes as well as genes

• Mitosis occurs• Duplicated

chromosomes are evenly distributed into 2 daughter nuclei

• cytokinesis

Sect 8.3

Page 3: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Chromosomes

•Consists of a long DNA molecule (represents thousands of genes)

•Also consists of proteins (structure, helps control gene activity)

Sect 8.4

Page 4: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

• This DNA-protein complex is chromatin• Chromatin is organized into a long, thin fiber• Fiber is coiled & folded to form the chromosome• Gene – a unit of information on a chromosome

- consists of DNA- can be passed along to offspring

Page 5: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

•All cells in the body (somatic) have the same # of chromosomes (46)

•Except for sperm & eggs (sex cells – 23)

Page 6: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

•When chromosomes replicate, they form 2 identical structures called sister chromatids (joined by a centromere)

•When the sister chromatids separate during mitosis, each goes into a daughter cell

Page 7: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis
Page 8: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Cell Cycle (summary)

•Cell doubles its amount of cytoplasm including organelles

•DNA is duplicated•Nucleus & its contents divide

by mitosis•Cytoplasm is divided

between 2 daughter cells

Sect 8.5

Page 9: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Cell Cycle (Interphase)• Lasts 90% of

total time for cell cycle

• Divided into 3 phases:

- G1 Phase (1st gap) period of interphase before DNA synthesis begins (growth in size, proteins, organelles)

- S Phase (synthesis) when DNA synthesized

- G2 Phase (second gap) period after DNA synthesis begins but before mitosis begins (proteins synthesized essential to cell division)

Page 10: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Cell Cycle (M Phase)

•10% of cell life•Mitosis – nucleus & contents

divide •Cytokinesis – cytoplasm

divides which generates 2 daughter cells

Page 11: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Cell Cycle (Phases of Mitosis)

•Prophase•Prometaphase•Metaphase•Anaphase•Telophase/Cytokinesis

Sect 8.6

p. 130-131

Page 12: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Prophase• Chromatin

tightens & thickens (chromosomes now visible)

• Each duplicated chromosome is seen as 2 identical sister chromatids joined by a centromere

•Nucleus disappears

•Microtubules form a radial array called an aster around each centriole

•Mitotic spindle forms

Page 13: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Prometaphase • Nuclear envelope disappears & spindle enters nucleus

• Bundles of microtubules extend from pole to equator

• Centromeres have kinetochores to which kinetochore fibers are attached

Page 14: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Metaphase

•Centriole pairs are now at opposite poles

•Chromosomes line up on the metaphase plate (a plane between the 2 poles)

Page 15: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Anaphase• Paired

centromere of each chromosome moves apart-sister chromatids are now free of each other-each chromatid is now a chromosome

Page 16: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

•Spindle moves the chromosomes to opposite poles

•Poles move farther apart•Each pole now has a

complete set of chromosomes

Page 17: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Telophase•Polar fibers

elongate•Nuclear

envelopes are formed from earlier fragments from the parent cell

•Nucleolus reappears•Mitosis is complete

Page 18: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Cytokinesis(animals – cleavage)

•Shallow groove in cell surface near old metaphase plate (called cleavage furrow)

•Contractile ring of microfilaments is found on cytoplasm side of furrow

-ring contracts & shrinks in diameter

-Cleavage furrow deepens until parent cell pinches in two

Sect 8.7

Page 19: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis
Page 20: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Cytokinesis(plants – no cleavage

furrow)•Cell plate forms across

midline of parent cell•Double membrane is formed•Fusion of each of these 2

membranes w/plasma membrane results in the formation of 2 daughter cells

Page 21: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis
Page 22: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

What affects mitosis?

Normal Cell Division – 3 factors:

Anchorage Dependent – cells must be “anchored” to a solid surface to divide; keeps cells separated from their normal surroundings from dividing inappropriately

Sect 8.8

Page 23: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Density-Dependent Inhibition – rate of cell division decreases as cell population becomes denser

Growth Factors – proteins secreted by certain body (somatic) cells that stimulate other cells to divide

p. 133

Page 24: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Cell-Cycle Control Systems

•It is a cyclically operating set of proteins (mostly growth factors) in the cell that triggers & coordinates major events in the cell cycle.

•Major checkpoints in G1, G2, and M:

- G1 checkpoint seems to be most critical in many cells (gives go-ahead to start cell-cycle & divide, non-dividing cells are stuck at G1

checkpoint called Go)

Sect 8.9

Page 25: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

-G2 checkpoint gives go-ahead to start M phase

-M checkpoint go-ahead signals that the proper attachment of the spindle fibers to the chromosomes & prompts the separation of the sister chromatids

-What is signal transduction?* Protein that receives signals for specific activities

Page 26: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Uncontrolled Cell Growth- can produce excessive growth resulting in an abnormal mass called a tumor• Benign =

abnormal mass of normal cells that normally remain at their original site

• can usually be removed by surgery

• Malignant = mass of cancer cells that can spread beyond their original site to neighboring cells (growth) or other sites of the body (metastasis – circulatory system)

Page 27: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Cancer cells do not have a properly functioning cell-cycle.

• Carcinomas – cancers of the external & internal linings of body (skin, linings of intestines)

• Sarcomas – cancers of tissues that support body (bone, muscle)

• Leukemias & Lymphomas – cancer of blood-forming tissue (bone marrow, spleen, lymph nodes)

Page 28: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis
Page 29: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Treatment for Cancer• In radiation

therapy, cancer cells are most likely dividing at any given time & will destroy cells by disrupting cell division w/out injuring normal cells

• Chemotherapy uses the same strategy as radiation therapy but uses chemicals instead

Page 30: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Sexual & Asexual Reproduction

• When offspring results from 2 parents

• Offspring has a unique combination of genes inherited from BOTH parents

• When an individual inherits all its genes from a SINGLE parent

• Consists of simple division or budding

Sect 8.11

Page 31: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Sexual Life Cycle (human)

•Each somatic cell = 46 chromosomes

•Chromosomes differ from each other in size, position of centromere, staining pattern

•Matched in pairs (this creates a karyotype)

Sect 8.12

Page 32: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

•Chromosomes that make up a pair are called homologous chromosomes

- same size & have same centromere position

- each carries genes controlling same inherited trait but possibly different versions

-genes for a certain trait are located in a particular place - locus

blue

green

Page 33: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

•23rd pair of chromosomes is the sex chromosomes

- XY for males

- XX for females

•All other chromosomes are called autosomes

Page 34: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Chromosome Numbers

•Humans inherit 2 sets - maternal = 23 - paternal = 23•Cells containing 2 sets are

diploid or 2N•Cells containing 1 set are

haploid or 1N

Sect 8.13

Page 35: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

•Gametes are haploid cells

- they are reproductive cells, either sperm or egg

•Each sperm or egg has single set of 22 autosomes plus 1 sex chromosome•Fertilization occurs when egg & sperm unite & create a zygote

Page 36: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

•Production of gametes requires a special type of division

- use reduction division called meiosis

- reduces chromosome number by half

Page 37: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Meiotic Cell Division

Meiosis I - Prophase I - Metaphase I - Anaphase I - Telophase I/

Cytokinesis

Meiosis II - Prophase II - Metaphase II - Anaphase II - Telophase II/

Cytokinesis

Sect 8.14

p. 138-139

Page 38: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Meiosis I

• Produces haploid gametes in diploid organisms

(Prophase I)

•Homologous chromosomes come together as pairs

- each is made of 4 chromatids

- each forms a tetrad

- 90% of meiotic cell division

Page 39: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

- crossing over of genetic material can occur (segments of non-sister chromatids can exchange places)

- spindle forms

- nuclear envelope & nucleolus disappear

Page 40: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

(Metaphase I)

•Tetrads line up on the metaphase plate

Page 41: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

(Anaphase I)•Homologous pairs separate & go to opposite poles (only tetrad splits)

(Telophase I/ Cytokinesis)•Cytoplasm divides making 2 daughter cells•Interkinesis occurs (rest time)

Page 42: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Meiosis II

(Metaphase II)

•Chromosomes line up on the metaphase plate

(Prophase II)Spindle moves chromosomes toward the equator

Page 43: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

(Anaphase II)

•Centromeres of sister chromatids separate

•Individual chromosomes move to poles

Page 44: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

(Telophase II/ Cytokinesis)•Nuclear envelope reforms•4 daughter cells are made (each has ½ the number of chromosomes of parent)

Page 45: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Comparing Mitosis & Meiosisp. 140

• Behavior of chromosomes is same

• 2 daughter cells that are each 2N

• Behavior of chromosomes is same

• 4 daughter cells that are each N

• Very different than mitosis because of tetrad

Sect 8.15

Page 46: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Genetic Variation

•Independent Assortment•Random Fertilization•Crossing Over

Page 47: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Independent Assortment

•Orientation of homologous pairs relative to the 2 poles is random (there are 2 possibilities)

•The first meiotic division results in independent assortment of maternal and paternal chromosomes into daughter cells

Sect 8.16

Page 48: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

•In humans, the number of combinations of maternal or paternal chromosomes is 223 = 8 million

•There are 2N possible combinations where N is the haploid number

Page 49: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Random Fertilization

•An egg cell represents 8 million different possibilities

•A sperm cell represents 8 million different possibilities

•A zygote will have 64 trillion diploid combinations

Sect 8.17

Page 50: CHAPTER 8 The Cellular Basis of Reproduction and Inheritance Sexual reproduction mitosis asexual reproduction meiosis

Crossing Over

• Identical regions of chromatids are exchanged

- results in a change in genetic material

- this is known as genetic recombination

• Produces combinations different from those originally inherited

Sect 8.18