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Ch 8 - Growth & the Means to sexual reproduction Why do cells divide? Replacement of skin cells Dead cells Epidermis, the outer layer of the skin Dividing cells Dermis Figure 8.11B Asexual reproduction of a prokaryotic cell Plasma membrane Cell wall Division into two cells Figure 8.3A Mitosis = asexual reproduction What do all cells need to function? DNA ) genome Sum of genetic information Made of autosomes and sex chromosomes Chromosomes occur in homologous pairs in sexually reproducing organisms Chromosome number of an organism can be DIploid or HAPloid Karyotype – array of chromosomes an organism has Cell Cycle The cell division party!! Interphase G1 S G2 G0 End results of Mitosis 1 cell has become 2 New cells made Genetic information has stayed the same Number of chromosomes has stayed the same in each new cell Regulation of Mitosis/growth Cell checkpoints and feedback mechanisms Growth hormones Density dependence Growth factors tell the cell to divide Growth factor Plasma membrane Receptor protein Signal transduction pathway Figure 8.8B Relay proteins Cells continue dividing until they touch one another This is called density-dependent inhibition Cells anchor to dish surface and divide. When cells have formed a complete single layer, they stop dividing (density-dependent inhibition). If some cells are scraped away, the remaining cells divide to fill the dish with a single layer and then stop (density-dependent inhibition). Figure 8.8A Cancer Cells Behaving Badly unlimited division, no apoptosis Feedback signals not working Benign vs. malignant Metastasize tumor • Malignant tumors can invade other tissues and may kill the organism Lymph vessels Tumor Glandular tissue Metastasis 1 A tumor grows from a single cancer cell. Figure 8.10 2 Cancer cells invade neighboring tissue. 3 Cancer cells spread through lymph and blood vessels to other parts of the body. Formation of Sex Cells Must have haploid number of chromosomes in gametes Reduction/Division Must reduce the diploid number by 1/2 This is Meiosis Stages … One Interphase and chromosome doubling Meiosis I and Meiosis II 2 cytokinesis End result – 4 gametes with ½ chromosome number Diploid to haploid At the end of Meiosis I, 2 cells with ½ the chromosome # (one of each homologous pair) Those chromosomes are still made of pairs of chromatids which still need to be pulled apart Meiosis II Simply, mitosis again Genetic Diversity Crossing over Random line-up on metaphase plate Independent assortment Union of individual gametes to form zygote Which cells undergo Mitosis? Meiosis? The human life cycle Haploid gametes (n = 23) Egg cell Sperm cell MEIOSIS FERTILIZATION Diploid zygote (2n = 46) Multicellular diploid adults (2n = 46) Mitosis and development Figure 8.13 Meiosis Forms sperm Spermatogenesis Forms eggs Oogenesis Chromosome Errors Deletion Inversion Translocation Sticky cromosomes