Introduction to Cell Division Notes

ericchapman81 1,476 views 23 slides Feb 09, 2017
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About This Presentation

Know this information for the AIR test.


Slide Content

Introduction to
Cell Division
Notes

Cell Division
Where do new cells come from?
Other cells… skin cells make skin
cells, muscle cells make muscle
cells and so on.
A skin cell can not make a muscle
cell, only another skin cell.
The process of one cell making
another cell is called cell division.

Cell Division
What is cell
division?
how a cell
reproduces, makes
a copy of itself.
how living things
grow (Mitosis) and
make sex cells
(Meiosis).

Why do we need new cells?
Need new cells to:
Grow
Repair scratches and
tears (scars)

Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic??
•What is the difference?
•Do both have a cell membrane?
•YES!!!!
•Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus and
organelles with membranes and
Prokaryotic cells do NOT have a
nucleus!!

Cell Division
Cell Divison for:
1. Prokaryotes (like
bacteria cells)
Binary Fission (unicellular
organisms)  DNA copied,
cell grows, cell splits in two.
Unicellular organisms- this is
how they reproduce.

Cell Division
2. Eukaryotes –
(plant/animal cells)
Mitosis (multicellular
organisms)  DNA copied,
cell grows, cell splits in two.
new cells have identical
genetic material; produces
clones.
Mitosis is about the division of
the nucleus.

Nucleus
Nucleus is important for:
1. Stores hereditary
information in its DNA.
2. DNA makes RNA
3. Contains the nucleolus
(where DNA is in
nucleus, dark circle)

Nucleic Acids
Function of DNA –
Store and transmit hereditary information
DNA – stands for Deoxyribose Nucleic Acid

Cell Division: Mitosis
Before a cell can divide it must organize its
DNA and form chromosomes, so it copies and
divides DNA accurately.

Making Chromosomes
How DNA condenses to form chromosomes:
1.Strands of DNA wrap around proteins called
Histones.
2. This then forms a
molecule called chromatin.
Chromatin is found in the
nucleus and is how DNA
spends the majority of its life.

Chromosomes
Chromatin continues to condense and
eventually it forms chromosomes.
Chromosomes – tightly coiled packages of
DNA held together by proteins.

Chromosomes
Chromatid – half of a
chromosome; forms as
DNA copies itself before
cell division
Centromere – holds the
chromatids together until
they separate

Chromosomes
Each species has a unique number of chromosomes
How many chromosomes do humans have?
46 chromosomes or 23 pairs.

Chromosomes
2 Types of Chromosomes:
1. Sex Chromosomes – are the chromosomes
that determine the sex of an organism.
Female: XX
Male: XY
2. Autosomes – all other chromosomes
Humans: 44 autosomal chromosomes

Chromosomes
Karyotype – is a picture
of the chromosomes in
a dividing cell.
22 homologous
pairs of autosomes.
2 sex chromosomes

Chromosomes
Homologous
chromosomes – two copies
of each autosome (maternal
and paternal)
Homologous chromosomes
are the same size, shape,
and carry genes for the same
trait.

Chromosomes
Diploid Cells (2n)– are
cells that have 46
chromosomes.
All cells in your body are
diploid except sex cells
Haploid Cells (n)– cells
that only have 23
chromosomes
Ex. Gametes (sex cells)

Chromosomes
Examples of haploid
cells?
Gametes - sperm
and egg cells; they
have 23
chromosomes
Fertilization 23 in
sperm + 23 in egg =
46