• __________ (example: baby adult) • ___________________ (asexual reproduction in single celled organisms) • ____________________________ of dead/damaged/infected (example: skin/red blood cells/bone cells) • ______________________ formation in multicellular organisms (meiosis) • In eukaryotes: made up of ____________and _____________ • At different times, proteins cause the DNA to: – be ________________________like spaghetti in a bowl – be tightly _______________into the X-shaped (these we can see in the microscope) • Central constricted region called _________________ that serves as an attachment point for the spindle fibers during mitosis. • Chromosomes exist in 2 different states: - before DNA replication, chromosomes have one _____________________. - after DNA replication, chromosomes have 2 sister _________________, held together at the ___________________. Each chromatid is one piece of DNA with its supporting ____________________. • Why is DNA replication necessary? Cell Cycle __________________________: Longest part of the cell cycle Includes G1, S and G2 G1: cell ________________ S: cell growth; _________________________ G2: cell growth; organelles _________________ DNA begins to ___________________ into chromosomes • _________is the division of the eukaryote nucleus, which goes on throughout life in all parts of the body. • Organelles can be randomly separated into the daughter cells but chromosomes must be precisely divided so that each daughter cell gets exactly the _______________DNA. • Every human cell has the same __________ chromosomes • Mitosis is usually divided into 4 phases: • Prophase (P) • ___________________(M) • Anaphase (A) • ___________________(T) Phases of Mitosis: 1. __________________________ Chromatin finishes ___________________ into chromosomes (visible under light microscope) Nucleolus/nuclear envelope ___________________ down Spindle fibers form from centrosomes/_________________ with microtubules extending out Chromosomes appear as 2 identical sister chromatids joined together at centromeres 2. Metaphase _________________ stage of mitosis Chromosomes move to ______________of cell (metaphase plate) Chromosome’s centromeres are on metaphase plate with sister chromatids each facing opposite sides of cell ______________________ at opposite sides of cell 3. Anaphase: _______________ stage of mitosis Sister chromatids ________________ and begin moving towards __________________ends of cell (spindle fibers pull sister chromatids in via the centromere) and each one is now a “___________________” Cell elongates At end of phase, each end of the cell contains complete and _____________________ chromosomes 4. _________________________: -Chromosomes are at each side of cell and __________________ begins to re-form around -Chromosomes _________________to form _____________________ -Spindle fibers disintegrate -Cell is elongated and ready for ______________________ Animal Cell Cytokinesis inward ______________ of plasma membrane to form __________________ _________________ Plant Cell Cytokinesis cell __________ forms and moves outward towards the sides of the cell from central region • _________________= result of uncontrolled cell division • The genetic checks that stop cells from reproducing fail to work and they grow out of control • _______________ = gene that turns a normal cell into a cancer cell • Tumors can occur in any organ or tissue, though are most common after exposure to carcinogens (e.g. tobacco smoke) or in particularly active tissues (e.g. breast, skin) • Angiogenesis: tumor recruits blood vessels and grows larger • Metastasis: part of the tumor invades the blood vessel, travels through the blood and starts to forma a tumor in another part of the body Normal cells are controlled by several factors: Normal cells stay in the G1 stage of the cell cycle until they are given a specific signal. Cancer cells enter the S phase without waiting for a signal. Normal cells are mortal. This means that they can divide about 50 times and then they lose the ability to die. This “clock” gets re-set during the formation of the gametes. Cancer cells escape this process of mortality: they are immortal and can divide endlessly. Normal cells that suffer significant chromosome damage destroy themselves due to the action of a gene called “p53”. Cancer cells either lose the p53 gene or ignore its message and fail to kill themselves (process known as apoptosis)