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The Nature of Heredity

The Nature of Heredity. SBI3U0. Heredity. Genetics The study of heredity and variation Heredity refers to the fact that an individual can inherit traits from its parents You will share characteristics with your parents If your parents have black hair, you will likely have black hair

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The Nature of Heredity

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  1. The Nature of Heredity SBI3U0

  2. Heredity • Genetics • The study of heredity and variation • Heredity refers to the fact that an individual can inherit traits from its parents • You will share characteristics with your parents • If your parents have black hair, you will likely have black hair • Bacterial cells will share characteristics with their parent cells • If a bacteria has cilia, its offspring will have cilia • If a bacteria causes the flu, its offspring will also cause the flu

  3. DNA • Heredity is due to a certain class of molecules called nucleic acids • In humans (and plants, animals, fungi, etc) deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is the nucleic acid responsible for heredity • In bacteria it is a related molecule called RNA ribonucleic acid • DNA has an elegant structure • It has a sugar-phosphate back bone that supports the bases adenine (A), guanine (G), thymine (T), and cytosine (C)

  4. DNA • DNA forms a double helix • With the bases in the middle • This means there are two strands side-by-side • The strands coil into a helical shape

  5. Chromosomes • These helices of DNA coil themselves around proteins to create large, dense structures called chromosomes • Each chromosome contains the DNA sequences for several (often thousands) of traits • The specific DNA sequence (of bases) that codes for a certain trait is called a gene • The position of a gene on a chromosome is called a locus Loci

  6. Cell Cycle • All cells have a specific life cycle that ensures that they will divide and reproduce new cells that have the appropriate genes to carry on living • Every cell must have a specific number of chromosomes to encode all of the proper genetic information for that cell • Dog cells contain 78 chromosomes • Tomato plant cells contain 24 chromosomes • Human cells contain 46 chromosomes • The cell cycle shows how cells live and then procreate

  7. Cell Cycle • Why do cells need to procreate? • 1) Normal cell replacement • Cells die all of the time (~3 million a minute in your body) and they need to be replaced or your body would not function for very long • This occurs do to injury, not receiving enough food/oxygen, or by natural aging • All cells have different lifespans • Eg: Brain cells last 30-50 years, red blood cells last ~120 days, while stomach lining cells last ~2 days

  8. Cell Cycle • 2) Regeneration • When you cut your skin or break a bone, new cells must be created to repair the damage • This ability is usually limited • Eg: if you cut your skin too deep you cannot grow back new skin cells, instead your body fills in the hole with scar tissue

  9. Cell Cycle • Cells spend most of their time in “interphase” • During interphase there are two growth phases (G1 and G2) where the cell grows larger, increases its number of organelles and cytoplasm, and duplicates its chromosomes • After G2 the cell is ready for division

  10. Cell Division • The cell division portion of the cycle is different depending on the type of cell • Most cells undergo mitosis, which is used exclusively for asexual reproduction • Meaning that there is one parent cell only • This occurs in most simple organisms, and in the somatic cells of multicellular organisms • Somatic cells refer to body cells that are not used to reproduce an entire organism (eg: skin cells, brain cells) • Some cells divide slightly differently, via meiosis. These cells are used for sexual reproduction and we will look at them later on

  11. Mitosis • Mitosis describes the division of a single cell into an exact duplicate • We call the duplicate a daughter cell • Mitosis occurs in distinct stages • Prophase • Metaphase • Anaphase • Telophase • Cytokinesis

  12. Interphase • Before mitosis begins the cell is in interphase • During this phase (G1, S, G2) the cell grows larger and duplicates all of its DNA • There are now 92 chromosomes in humans • There is a duplicate of each of the 46 chromosomes • The DNA replicates so that the daughter and parent cells each get a complete set of DNA

  13. Prophase • In prophase, the chromosomes wrap themselves around special proteins and become short, thick, structures called chromatin • Each duplicate chromatin is referred to as a chromatid • The two sister chromatids (the two duplicates) are connected together at the centromere

  14. Prophase • The nuclear membrane starts to dissolve • In animal cells, organelles called centrioles move to the poles of the cell • These centrioles attach themselves to, and organize, the series of microtubules that attach to the centromere of each chromatin

  15. Prophase • Each centriole is connected to each chromatin • Thus each chromatin is connected to two microtubules • One going to the top of the cell and one going to the bottom

  16. Metaphase • By the time metaphase occurs, the chromatin have arranged themselves along the equator of the cell • The chromatin are arranged so that one sister chromatid is facing the top of the cell while the other is facing the bottom

  17. Anaphase • In anaphase, the spindle fibres pull the sister chromatids apart and start separating them to opposite sides of the cell • In this way, each side of the cell is getting a complete set of chromosomes • In humans, each cell gets 46 chromosomes

  18. Telophase • Telophase is the beginning of the end of mitosis • The chromatids are separated to opposite poles of the cell • The nuclear membrane starts forming around the two groups of chromatin • The DNA starts to unspool from the proteins holding it together as chromatin • The cell membrane starts to pinch in forming a cleavage furrow

  19. Cytokinesis • This is the separation of the two daughter cells from one another • The cleavage furrow grows and eventually pinches off the cells from each other, forming two distinct (and identical) cells • The organelles and cytoplasm is split between the two cells Animation

  20. Cloning • Cloning is a term that refers to creating an exact copy of an organism from one single cell • This is exactly what happens in mitosis • The biotechnology technique is slightly different from normal mitosis however • Multicellular organisms have two classes of cells • Stem cells and Specialized cells • Specialized cells have specific functions and are quite different from one another (muscle vs. brain vs. skin etc.) • Stem cells can divide and create any type of specialized cell

  21. Cloning • Since specialized cells do not normally divide to create different specialized cells • Muscle cells only divide into muscle cells, they do not create brain cells (for example) • Adults are mostly composed of specialized cells, with very few stem cells • Therefore creating a clone animal out of a specialized cell is difficult • Traditionally stem cells have been used for the purpose of cloning

  22. Cloning • Recently there have been many breakthroughs in this area, and some specialized cells can now be turned into clone cells and used for cloning • This is still a very active area of research • Dolly the sheep • Many species of animals have been successfully cloned • All have had short life spans and exhibited many physiological problems, like arthritis, premature aging, and lung disease • Click and Clone

  23. Applications of Cloning • We can genetically modify certain organisms to give them advantageous traits and then clone them to produce several identical organisms • Eg: Producing corn plants that can grow in cold weather, or cows that produce more milk than normal • Cloning allows us to produce several organisms with our specific modifications • We already do this for several of our fruits and vegetables • Homework pg 151 #1-9, 11, 12

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