Download Cellular Growth and Reproductive Cycles

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 1 of 11
Cellular Growth and Reproductive Cycles
Cell Size is Limited by Geometry and Physics:
 Surface area of objects is a “2nd order function”
(squares if the diameter doubles; increases faster than height)
 Volume of objects is a “3rd order function”
(cubes if the diameter doubles; increases incredibly fast)
 Doubling the diameter of a cell:
— Produces a 4X increase in surface area,
— Produces an 8X increase in volume
 When diameter gets too large, cells have too much
volume (in comparison to area) for them to survive:

Diffusion slows down dramatically;

Oxygen, nutrients arrive at mitochondria too slowly;

RNA (genetic messages) cannot be made by nucleus
fast enough for effective protein synthesis to occur
(“DNA overload”);

Carbon dioxide / other waste cannot diffuse out of cell
fast enough — cell “drowns in its own poisons.”
 Therefore most cells are about 2- 200  (microns) in
size (small bacteria vs. large plant cells)
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 2 of 11
Cells Must Reproduce
Unicellular organisms play a “game of numbers”:

Cannot grow indefinitely (forever);

Survive & compete by multiplying
Multicellular organisms “win by getting bigger.”

Growth of single cells is limited by geometry and
physics – cells are doomed if they exceed 200 microns.

Growth above this size, or development
(a change in size and shape) REQUIRES a
CONSTANT SUPPLY of HEALTHY NEW CELLS.

Cell reproduction is needed for replacement of
dead/dying tissues
Mitosis (orderly separation and distribution of genetic
materials in new somatic cells)
 Occurs only in eukaryotic cells
(flowering plants, Protista, animals, and fungi)
 Does NOT occur in prokaryotes — “binary fission”
is the term used to describe copying of bacterial cells.
 Is NOT used to produce sperm/egg cells —
process is different and is called “meiosis.”
 Involves a cyclical, orderly sequence of well-defined steps
 Must begin AFTER copying of chromatin –
the strands of DNA & proteins (histones) that contain
genetic information.
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 3 of 11
Phases of the Cell Cycle:
Interphase (once thought to be a “resting phase”)
 About 75% – 90% of a cell’s life
 Growth and synthesis of needed molecules and
organelles;
 Most metabolic activities;
 Careful duplication of chromatin;
 Divided into 3 sub-phases:
 Interphase 1 (G1): rapid growth, protein
synthesis, copying of paired centrioles to make 4
(Each centriole is composed of 9 triads
of microtubules – centrioles can be
lengthened or digested by enzymes.)
 Interphase 2 (S): (chromatin copying
only occurs during this period)
 Interphase 3 (G2):
 production of organelles for division
(especially mitochondria & ribosomes)
 beginnings of mitotic cycle (Chromosomes
condense and become visible)
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 4 of 11
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 5 of 11
Prophase
 Copied chromatin “super-coils” around histones—
visible pairs in enlarged nucleus are chromosomes;
 Each pair of identical chromatin strands
(sister chromatids) is joined at a centromere;
 Nuclear envelope & nucleolus is destroyed by
digestive enzymes;
 1 pair of centrioles move to each end of cell, begin
formation of a spindle (animal cells only)

Football-shaped; cage-like; made of microtubules

Eventually attaches to centromeres, pulling
sister chromatids apart
 In plant cells, chromosomes are simply moved by
microtubules
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 6 of 11
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 7 of 11
Metaphase
 Enzymes build & lengthen spindle fibers;
 2 Spindle fibers attach to each centromere
(1 from each polar end of cell – assures
identical DNA distribution to “daughter cells”)
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 8 of 11
Anaphase
 Centromeres split, separating chromatids;
 Each Spindle fiber shortens, pulling chromatids apart
(Enzymes digest tubulin strands; return
their amino acids to cytoplasm)
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 9 of 11
Telophase
 Uncoiling of chromatin, making it invisible
 Formation of new nuclei / nucleoli:

Protein synthesis resumes;

DNA resumes regulation of metabolic activity
 Cytokinesis (NOT IN PLANT CELLS)
(plasma membrane “pinches off” cytoplasm,
then closes – separating cell into 2 daughter cells)
Or:
 Formation of a “cell plate” from Golgi Apparatus
(PLANT CELLS ONLY)

Solidifies into a shared cell wall

Eventually separates cytoplasm, forms a cell wall for
each daughter cell;

Is lined by a new cell membrane
 Complete digestion of spindle
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 10 of 11
Notes on Cellular Reproduction
Page 11 of 11
Interphase (and entire cycle) repeats.
Additional Information on Mitosis:
 Death of a cell without faithful reproduction –
“Cell Apoptosis”
 Cause unknown – programmed genetically
 Without apoptosis, human life expectancy
might reach 150 years
 The reproductive process is regulated by enzymes
(proteins that speed/control chemical reactions)
 “Gene:” a section of the DNA coding for proteins
 Genes that slow or stop mitosis are activated by
contact with other cells (“contact inhibition”)
 Incorrectly-Copied (mutated) genes

Are rarely helpful to the organism

Often are harmful – result in changed proteins

May result in uncontrolled cellular reproduction
(Cancer) if used to produce proteins for contact
inhibition

Mutagenic chemicals

Ultra-violet (UV) radiation

Nuclear radiation

?