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Transcript
Lesson Overview
Cell Growth, Division, and Reproduction
Lesson Overview
10.1 Cell Growth, Division,
and Reproduction
Lesson Overview
Cells
Cell Growth, Division, and Reproduction
Cell Size
Food, oxygen, and water enter a cell through the cell
membrane. Waste products leave in the same way.
This exchange depends on the surface area of a
cell.
A larger cell is less efficient in moving nutrients
and waste materials across its cell membrane.
The rate at which food and oxygen are used up and waste
products are produced depends on the cell’s volume.
Cell needs a greater surface area than volume!
rap
Lesson Overview
Cell Growth, Division, and Reproduction
Exchanging Materials
As a cell grows the membrane is unable to keep up with the
volume, because the volume grows a faster rate.
This is represented by the surface to volume ratio, or S : V, or S/V.
In a cell that is one unit in size, the surface area is 6 square units
and the volume is 1 cubic unit. The ratio then is 6/1.
As a cell gets larger, this ratio gets smaller, meaning the cell
membrane cannot supply the inside with what it needs to
survive.
Lesson Overview
Cell Growth, Division, and Reproduction
Information “Overload”
Cell size is limited by its DNA, if the cell gets too
big the DNA would no longer be able to serve the
needs of the cell.
Lesson Overview
Cell Growth, Division, and Reproduction
Division of the Cell
Before a cell grows too large, it divides into two new “daughter”
cells in a process called cell division.
Before cell division, the cell copies all of its DNA.
It then divides into two “daughter” cells. Each daughter cell
receives a complete set of DNA.
Cell division reduces cell volume. It also results in an increased
ratio of surface area to volume, for each daughter cell.
Lesson Overview
Cell Growth, Division, and Reproduction
Cell Division and Reproduction
Asexual reproduction-The production of
genetically identical offspring from a single
parent
Asexual reproduction is a simple, efficient, and
effective way for an organism to produce a large
number of offspring.
Both prokaryotic and eukaryotic single-celled
organisms and many multicellular organisms
can reproduce asexually.
Lesson Overview
Cell Growth, Division, and Reproduction
Examples of Asexual Reproduction
Bacteria reproduce by binary fission.
Kalanchoe plants from plantlets.
Hydras reproduce by budding.
Lesson Overview
Cell Growth, Division, and Reproduction
Sexual Reproduction
In sexual reproduction, offspring are produced by the fusion
of two sex cells – one from each of two parents.
New cells are genetically different!!
Most animals and plants, and many single-celled organisms,
reproduce sexually.
Lesson Overview
Cell Growth, Division, and Reproduction
Comparing Sexual and Asexual
Reproduction