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The Cell Cycle and Mitosis

The document summarizes key aspects of eukaryotic cell division. It describes the two main stages as mitosis, which is nuclear division, and cytokinesis, which is cytoplasmic division. It provides details on the cell cycle phases (interphase consisting of G1, S, and G2 phases and the M phase consisting of prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase). Chromosomes and their structure are also summarized. Each phase of mitosis is briefly described.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
17 views

The Cell Cycle and Mitosis

The document summarizes key aspects of eukaryotic cell division. It describes the two main stages as mitosis, which is nuclear division, and cytokinesis, which is cytoplasmic division. It provides details on the cell cycle phases (interphase consisting of G1, S, and G2 phases and the M phase consisting of prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase). Chromosomes and their structure are also summarized. Each phase of mitosis is briefly described.

Uploaded by

alex caitlin
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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I S

O S
I T
M
N D
A
L E
YC
L C
E L
C
E
TH
EUKARYOTIC CELLS

S O M AT I C C E L L S SEX CELLS

Cells that make your The ONLY cells that


organs and tissues are not somatic –
sperm and egg
(Gametes)
CELL DIVISION

In eukaryotes, cell division occurs in two major


stages.
The first stage, division of the cell nucleus, is
called mitosis.
The second stage, division of the cell cytoplasm,
is called cytokinesis.
CELL CYCLE
The cell cycle is the series of events
that cells go through as they grow
and divide.
Interphase is the period of growth that
occurs between cell divisions.
Cell spends most of its life in this
phase.
CELL CYCLE

During the cell cycle:


1. a cell grows
2. prepares for division
3. divides to form two daughter cells,
each of which begins the cycle again
CELL CYCLE

The cell cycle consists of four phases:


G1 (First Gap Phase)
S Phase
G2 (Second Gap Phase)
M Phase
EVENTS OF THE CELL CYCLE

During G1, the cell


• increases in size (cell grows)
• synthesizes new proteins and organelles
(cell develops)
EVENTS OF THE CELL CYCLE

During the S phase, (DNA replication)


• chromosomes are replicated
• DNA synthesis takes place
Once a cell enters the S phase, it usually
completes the rest of the cell cycle
EVENTS OF THE CELL CYCLE

The G2 Phase (Second Gap Phase)


• organelles and molecules required for
cell division are produced
• Once G2 is complete, the cell is ready
to start the M phase—Mitosis
Cell Cycle
WHY DOES INTERPHASE HAPPEN?
cell must grow in order for extra
organelles and DNA have room in cell
DNA

Chromatin – long, thin strands made up of DNA


and protein. The protein helps the DNA to
stay together when chromosomes form.
Chromosomes -
Genetic information is passed from one
generation to the next on chromosomes.
Before cell division, each chromosome is
duplicated, or copied.
CHROMOSOMES – CONDENSED CHROMATIN
CHROMOSOMES
CHROMOSOMES
Each chromosome
consists of two Sister chromatids
identical “sister”
chromatids.
Each pair of
chromatids is
attached at an area
called the
centromere.
MITOSIS – CELL DIVISION
Occurs in body cells – somatic cells
Forms two identical daughter cells – exactly like
the original
Biologists divide the events of mitosis into four
phases: (PMAT)
Prophase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase
MITOSIS
PROPHASE Spindle
forming
Prophase is the
first and longest
phase of mitosis.
The centrioles
separate and take
up positions on
opposite sides of
the nucleus.
PROPHASE
The centrioles lie in a
region called the
centrosome.
The centrosome helps
to organize the
spindle, a fanlike
microtubule structure
that helps separate the
chromosomes.
SUMMARY OF PROPHASE
First phase of MITOSIS Longest Phase
Chromosomes become visible
Centrioles separate and move to opposite poles (ends)
Spindle fibers appear
Nucleolus and nuclear membrane (envelope) disappear
METAPHASE
The second phase of
mitosis is metaphase.
The chromosomes line
up across the center of
the cell.
Microtubules connect
the centromere of each
chromosome to the
poles of the spindle
SUMMARY OF METAPHASE

Shortest Phase
Chromosomes attach to spindle fibers in center of the
cell
Anaphase
The third phase of
mitosis.
The sister chromatids
separate into
individual
chromosomes.
The chromosomes
continue to move until
they have separated
into two groups.
SUMMARY OF ANAPHASE

Centromeres split apart and chromatids


separate from one another. Each chromatid
moves to opposite poles.
TELOPHASE
The fourth and final
phase of mitosis.
Chromosomes gather
at opposite ends of the
cell and lose their
distinct shape
A new nuclear
envelope forms around
each cluster of
chromosomes
SUMMARY OF TELOPHASE
Chromosomes reach opposite poles of cell
Chromatids unwind back into chromatin
Nuclear envelope and nucleolus reappear reforming the nucleus
Spindle fibers disappear
New double membrane (cell membrane ) gain to form between 2
nuclei (cell pinches)
Animal cell – cleavage
Plant cell – cell plate
CYTOKINESIS – CYTOPLASM DIVISION

During cytokinesis,
the cytoplasm
pinches in half.
Each daughter cell
has an identical set
of duplicate
chromosomes

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