1 / 33

How Cells Reproduce

How Cells Reproduce. Chapter 7. DNA. DNA serves as a storehouse of information for living things. DNA contains a code to make proteins. DNA Terminology. Gene = physical unit of heredity; housed on a chromosome Made of DNA Human genome = 25,000 genes

gyan
Télécharger la présentation

How Cells Reproduce

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How Cells Reproduce Chapter 7

  2. DNA • DNA serves as a storehouse of information for living things. • DNA contains a code to make proteins

  3. DNA Terminology • Gene = physical unit of heredity; housed on a chromosome • Made of DNA • Human genome = 25,000 genes • Chromosome = intricately folded unbroken strand of 40% DNA and 60% protein • Humans = 23 pairs (each has 1,000-2,000 different genes! (23 is referred to as haploid number) • Penicillin fungus = 1 pair • Ferns = some > 500 pairs!

  4. HumanChromosomes

  5. The Cell Cycle • This cycle keeps a record of the process of a cell over time • It is made up of a repeating pattern of growth, genetic duplication and division • A complete cycle is from the origin of a new cell until that cell divides. Note: A cell does not need to complete the cycle.

  6. Cell Cycle • Mitosis: cell division that occurs in non-reproductive cells (somatic cells) • Meiosis: a second process that divides DNA in cells that participate in sexual reproduction (germ cells)

  7. Mitosis • Preparation phase of eukaryotic cells for division • 5 Phases: • G1 • S • G2 • M • C Interphase; preparation for cell division Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase

  8. Interphase • In general, the longest part of the cell cycle • Cell increases in mass • DNA is duplicated

  9. Control of the cell cycle Figure 7.10

  10. G1 Checkpoint • Key checkpoint where the cell makes the decision of whether to continue with division or not • Cell can delay division or enter a resting phase

  11. The G1 CheckpointFigure 7.11

  12. G2 Checkpoint • Occurs right before mitosis M Checkpoint • Occurs right before cytokinesis after mitosis has occurred

  13. Meiosis • Cell division where gametes are produced • Humans reproduce by sexual reproduction which allows for combinations of desirable traits and more variability • Sexual reproduction presents a problem – of combining traits were accomplished by just combining two cells life would get incredibly complicated –more DNA is added to each generation

  14. Figure 7.19

  15. Genetic Background of Sexual Reproduction • Somatic cells contain two of each homologous chromosome (2N, diploid number) • Gametes have one of each of the homologous chromosomes (N, haploid number) • Female gametes are the ova and are produced in the ovaries • Male gametes are sperm and are produced in the testes • The process by which a single diploid cell divides to produce haploid reproductive cells is meiosis

  16. Meiosis Steps • Meiosis reduces CH number by duplication of the CH and then two divisions • Meiosis like mitosis begins with a diploid cell • The DNA (CH) is duplicated

  17. Meiosis Steps: Meiosis I • Meiosis I : separation of homologous CH • Prophase I • CH become visible • Homologous CH pair together = tetrad • Crossing over occurs • Homologous CH exchange recriprocal lengths of DNA • This process takes what was called a “maternal” CH not has a portion of the “paternal” CH • Allows for increased genetic diversity

  18. CrossingOverFig. 7.20

  19. Meiosis Steps: Meiosis I • Metaphase I • Tetrads line up on the equatorial plate • Alignment of one pair bears no relationship to the alignment of any other tetrad • This random alignment is Independent Assortment • Except for identical twins this process ensures that each offspring will be unique • Anaphase I • Homologous CH separate and move to poles • Telophase I • Cytokinesis creates two new haploid cells

  20. Meiosis Steps: Meiosis II • Stage where sister chromatids separate; events mimic mitosis • Prophase II • CH become visible • Metaphase II • CH align at the equatorial plate • Anaphase II • Sister chromatids separate and move to poles • Telophase II • Cytokinesis occus • A total of four haploid cells each containing chromatin are formed

  21. Prophase I • Each duplicated chromosome pairs with homologue • Homologues swap segments • Each chromosome becomes attached to spindle

  22. Metaphase I • Chromosomes are moved to middle of cell • Spindle is fully formed

  23. Anaphase I • Homologous chromosomes separate • Sister chromatids remain attached

  24. Telophase I • Chromosomes arrive at opposite poles • Usually followed by cytoplasmic division

  25. Prophase II • Microtubules attach to duplicated chromosomes

  26. Metaphase II • Duplicated chromosomes line up midway between spindle poles

  27. Anaphase II • Sister chromatids separate to become independent chromosomes

  28. Telophase II • Chromosomes arrive at opposite ends of cell • Nuclear envelopes form around chromosome sets • Four haploid cells

  29. What is the Significance of Meiosis? The process generates genetic diversity by ensuring that the gametes formed are different from one another • Crossing Over • Independent Assortment

  30. Genetic Diversity The above indicates that even though the two homologous chromosomes contain the same genetic information, the assortment of the chromosomes (the order they lie in) can determine what genetic information is present in each of the 4 gametes produced. With 23 chromosomes in a human gamete, their are 223 combinations (8388608 combinations)

  31. What happens when Meiosis runs amuck? • Genetic abnormalities • Aneuploidy • A condition in which an organism have more or fewer CH that normally exist in its species full set • Responsible for large amount of human miscarriages • In humans, live births will only result with one extra or fewer CH (2N +/- 1) • Monosomy: 2N – 1 • Trisomy: 2N + 1

  32. What happens when Meiosis runs amuck? Aneuploidy • The cause of aneuploidy is nondisjunction • Homologous CH or sister chromatids fail to separate correctly in meiosis • Eggs or sperm will then have an extra CH(s) or will be missing some • Human aneuploid conditions: • Down’s Syndrome: Trisomy 21 • Turners: XO • Metafemale: Trisomy X • Klinefelter’s: XXY • XYY males

More Related