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CELL GROWTH AND DIVISION

CELL GROWTH AND DIVISION. Chapter 10, section 1. Limits to Cell Growth. There are two main reasons why cells divide rather than continuing to grow indefinitely. The larger a cell becomes, the more demands are placed on its DNA

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CELL GROWTH AND DIVISION

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  1. CELL GROWTH AND DIVISION Chapter 10, section 1

  2. Limits to Cell Growth • There are two main reasons why cells divide rather than continuing to grow indefinitely. • The larger a cell becomes, the more demands are placed on its DNA • The cell has more trouble moving material into and out of the cell.

  3. DNA “Overload” • When a cell is small, the information stored in DNA is able to meet all of the cell’s needs. • If a cell increases in size without limits, an information crisis would occur.

  4. Compare a cell to a growing town: • In a small town, this main street is fine for a small population.

  5. But imagine that the population grows, • The tiny street of the small town can no longer handle all of the people.

  6. Exchanging Materials • In a cell, the rate at which oxygen and food enter a cell, and waste is removed from the cell depends on the total surface to volume ratio of a cell.

  7. Ratio of Surface Area to Volume • Image a cell that is shaped like a cube. The cell has a length of 1 cm. • Surface area would be equal to length x width x number of sides, • Or, 1cm x 1cm x 6 = 6 cm squared.

  8. The volume of the cell would be equal to: • Length x width x height • Or, 1 cm x 1 cm x 1 cm = 1 cm cubed. • The surface area by the volume ratio would be 6:1

  9. If the cell size was doubled or tripled, the volume increases more rapidly than the surface area. • This makes it much more difficult to get materials into and out of the cell.

  10. Division of a Cell • Before a cell becomes to large, a growing cell divides to form two “daughter” cells.

  11. Before cell division occurs, the cell replicates, or copies, all of its DNA. • Each daughter cell is identical to the original.

  12. CELL DIVISION Chapter 10, section 2

  13. In eukaryotes, the first stage of cell division is called mitosis. • The second stage of cell division is called cytokinesis. • Reproduction by mitosis and cytokinesis is classified as asexual, because each new cell is identical to the parent.

  14. Chromosomes • Chromosomes carry genetic information from one generation to the next. • Chromosomes are made up of DNA. • Humans have 46 chromosomes.

  15. A chromotid is one of two “sister” parts of a duplicated chromosome. • Centomeres hold the chromatids together

  16. The Cell Cycle • The cell cycle is a series of events that cells go through as they grow and divide. • During the cell cycle, a cell grows, prepares for division, and divides to form two identical daughter cells.

  17. Events of the Cell Cycle • The cell cycle consists of four phases.

  18. Interphase – is divided into three phases: • G1- During this stage, cells increase in size and make new proteins and organelles.

  19. S – in this stage, chromosomes are replicated. • G2 – this is usually the shortest stage, many of the organelles and molecules required for cell division are produced.

  20. Mitosis or the M phase • Biologists divide the events of mitosis into four phases: prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase.

  21. Prophase – chromosomes become visible. The centrioles, separate and take up positions on opposite sides of the nucleus.

  22. Metaphase – chromosomes line up across the center of the cell.

  23. Anaphase – chromatids are pulled apart by spindle fibers.

  24. Telophase – chromosomes begin to disperse, the nuclear envelope reforms, and spindle fibers break apart.

  25. Cytokinesis Cytokinesis is still part of the M phase. During cytokinesis, the cell membrane separates to form two identical new cells.

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