Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Ch. 8 Cell Reproduction Why do cells make new cells? 1. Growth 2. Maintenance – cells wear out 3. Repair - injury 4. Regeneration – lost body part 5. Reproduce asexually 8.1 Some organisms reproduce asexually • Offspring are genetic copies of the parent and of each other Figure 8.1A – All organisms can reproduce sexually • Creating variety in the offspring Figure 8.1B 8.3 Prokaryotes reproduce by binary fission • One chromosome • Chromosome copies itself • Cell lengthens, copies move apart • Cell membrane divides cell in two • Two identical organisms Eukaryotic nuclei contain many chromosomes Each chromosome contains thousands of genes - must be organized before cell can dividing Prokaryotic chromosomes LM 340 Colorized TEM 32,500 One-celled protists also do fission, but must do mitosis first to divide chromosomes evenly 8.5 The cell cycle - two phases Interphase – most of cell life - non-dividing cell INTERPHASE G1 S (DNA synthesis) G2 Mitotic (M) phase – dividing cell Figure 8.5 Cell Cycle INTERPHASE G1 growth, normal life functions S “synthesis” – DNA replicates G2 final growth; prepares to divide MITOTIC PHASE Mitosis – chromosomes condense, organize and divide - each new cell gets one copy of every chromosome Cytokinesis – cytoplasm divides Some cells divide often Tissues contain cells that are less specialized embryo Embryo Blood stem cells Plants and simple organisms Plants, simple animals Digestive lining cells Skin cells Bone marrow stem cells Digestive lining cells Some divide rarely or not at all Highly specialized cells do not divide when mature Nerve cells Nerve cells Muscle cells Muscle Liver cells –cells when injured Cartilage or tendon cells Cartilage, tendons How do muscles get bigger if muscle cells don’t divide? • Made of muscle fibers • Fibers are made of many fibrils Muscle fibers make muscle tissue Muscles get bigger when fibers enlarge • Exercise makes tiny tears in muscle fibers • As they heal, extra proteins make the fibers get thicker muscles get bigger AND cells can make more fibers Muscle tears heal with collagen and scar tissue DNA Review structure: Nucleotides Deoxyribose Phosphate Bases A C T G Polymers Genetic code Watson and Crick, 1953 Ch.10 Chromosomes of eukaryotes duplicate in cell division Before cell divides - DNA replicates a. Helicase “unzips” molecule b. Original strands are templates c. Free nucleotides in nucleus d. Polymerase – base-pairing rules two identical molecules Semi-conservative replication • Original strands serve as templates • New molecules have one original strand and one new strand Eukaryotic chromosomes Nucleus in non-dividing cell Early mitosis Chromosome is in CHROMATIN form CHROMATIN begins to condense before a cell can divide BEFORE a cell divides DNA condensation •DNA is ALREADY COPIED (replicated) •coils, packs, condenses Forms dense “CHROMOSOMES” •keeps copies organized and intact until cell splits CHROMOSOMES CONDENSE BEFORE CELL DIVISION Nucleosomes group to form chromatin DNA DNA wraps around histone proteins Groups of histones form nucleosomes This coils and wraps until it all fits into the nucleus. One chromosome (copied and packed for cell division) SEM of human chromosomes Sister chromatids identical copies Centromere holds chromatids together Prokaryotes have a single, circular chromosome, no histones; no nucleus Double-stranded (replicated) chromosome Replicated, condensed chromosome When a cell begins to divide Microtubules form spindle fibers between the centrioles Spindle fibers form a star shape at centrioles (aster) Centrioles move toward opposite poles of the cell Chromatin begins to condense PHASES OF MITOSIS PROPHASE – cell organizes, prepares •chromatin •nuclear membrane, nucleolus •spindle and asters •centrioles PROMETAPHASE – chromosomes condensed •move toward middle •centrioles to opposite poles •spindle METAPHASE – chromosomes in middle •Centromeres and spindle fibers LM 250 – The stages of cell division INTERPHASE PROPHASE Centrosomes (with centriole pairs) Chromatin Early mitotic spindle PROMETAPHASE Centrosome Fragments of nuclear envelope Kinetochore Nucleolus Nuclear envelope Figure 8.6 (Part 1) Chromosome, consisting Plasma membrane ot two sister chromatids Centromere Spindle microtubules ANAPHASE -chromosomes separate • spindle fibers pull • single copies to opposite poles of cell TELOPHASE – return to normal • chromosomes relax/uncoil into chromatin • nuclear membranes form; nucleoli appear • spindle fibers disappear CYTOKINESIS - division of cytoplasm • identical daughter cells Cleavage furrow ANAPHASE METAPHASE Cleavage furrow Metaphase plate Spindle Figure 8.6 (Part 2) TELOPHASE AND CYTOKINESIS Daughter chromosomes Nuclear envelope forming Nucleolus forming Cell division differs for plant and animal cells 8.7 Animal cytokinesis • Microfilaments SEM 140 • Cleavage furrow Cleavage furrow • Pinch cytoplasm in two Cleavage furrow Contracting ring of microfilaments Daughter cells Figure 8.7A Cell plate forming Wall of parent cell Daughter nucleus In plants - no centrioles or asters TEM 7,500 (has spindle) - cell plate forms - new cell wall grows Cell wall New cell wall along sides of cell plate Vesicles containing cell wall material Figure 8.7B Cell plate Daughter cells Plant, Animal Mitosis Animal cells: - centrioles anchor spindle fibers - asters visible at centrosomes - microfilaments pinch cytoplasm Plant cells: - no centrioles or asters - cell plate forms to divide cytoplasm Plant cell mitosis Animal cell mitosis Plant cell mitosis Control of Cell Division Chemical signals tell a cell when to divide Some made by cell; some from cell environment Normal rate: growth, repair - asexual reproduction in some organisms Slow rate: some cell types divide rarely (liver) - aging slow healing, lose some cells Fast rate: some cell types (skin, digestive lining) - embryo, growing zones (bones, root tips) Uncontrolled cancer As tissues age, cell division slows Some worn-out cells are not replaced Tissue cells gradually decrease in number Growth factors • Proteins secreted by cells, can start or stop cell division • When cells crowded, growth factors used up stop dividing After forming a single layer, cells have stopped dividing. Providing an additional supply of growth factors stimulates further cell division. Figure 8.8B Cyclins - proteins produced by cell at constant rate - when reach high level, cell divides Programmed Cell Death apoptosis 1. Cells damaged too much to repair – self-destruct 2. Embryonic development – lose unneeded cells Checkpoints in cell cycle Anchorage and Contact Inhibition Anchored to a solid substance - ex. Extracellular matrix, collagen framework Contact: stop dividing when they touch other cells - density-dependent inhibition Figure 8.8A Cells anchor to dish surface and divide. When cells have formed a complete single layer, they stop dividing (densitydependent 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). 8.10 Cancer – uncontrolled cell division • Cancer cells ignore cycle controls – Repeated and rapid cell divisions; immortal • tumor – mass of non-functioning cells – Benign – not cancer; do not spread to nearby tissue – May get large enough to stop tissue function • Malignant tumor – cancer – Will invade and destroy neighboring tissue • Metastatic tumor – spreads to other body parts – Starts new cancers Cells look abnormal and do not respond to signals that control the cell cycle • If not treated early, cancer will spread • kills by destroying organ function Lymph vessels Tumor Blood vessel Glandular tissue A tumor grows from a single cancer cell. Figure 8.10 Cancer cells invade neighboring tissue. Cancer cells spread through lymph and blood vessels to other parts of the body. Cancer – uncontrolled cell division 1) DNA damage - Cells begin to divide abnormally 2) Keep dividing, invade healthy tissue (malignant) 3) Spread in blood or lymph, can start new tumors (metastatic) BE CAREFUL when sunning • Wear sunscreen, sunglasses • Avoid brightest part of the day • Don’t use tanning beds The most common cancer - skin Melanoma -deadliest Melanoma Basal cell Squamous Cell Cancer treatment Radiation – high-energy, carefully aimed at tumor Chemotherapy – drugs specific for tumor types • interfere with cell division • some normal cells destroyed, too – Skin (lose hair); digestive lining (nausea) Surgery – remove tumor and nearby cells Boost immune system – healthy diet, reduce stress Asexual Reproduction New organism from one parent – offspring identical genetically Advantages: 1) no mate – good for solitary, sessile organisms or when population density is low 2) continues a successful gene makeup 3) usually fast, large numbers Disadvantage: no genetic variation Forms of Asexual Reproduction 1) Binary Fission - bacteria, protists 2) BUDDING - small growth from unspecialized cells - hydra, sponges - yeast (unicellular) - some plants Budding - Asexual Reproduction LM 10 Hydra with bud Budding cacti 3) Spore formation Spores – tiny cells with genetic material - many - disperse from parent - mosses, ferns, fungi 4) Vegetative propagation Complete plant can grow from part of parent plant Vegetative – root, stem, or leaf Natural Methods Runners Bulbs Tubers and Underground Stems Artificial Vegetative Propagation Root Separation Cuttings Grafting 5) Regeneration – replace lost body part starfish can replace an arm Lizards can replace a tail flatworms can regrow a body Stem cells and differentiation Differentiate – cells specialize as embryo develops Stem cell – unspecialized cell - can differentiate to form many kinds of cells - depends on chemical signals from nearby cells Multipotent or totipotent Stem cells for cloning tissues