Bio U1 - 1.6 Flashcards

1
Q

State the function of mitosis.

A

The function of mitosis is creating two identical daughter cells with genetically identical DNA

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2
Q

List five processes which involve mitosis.

A
  1. Tissue repair (for example burns or after injuries)
  2. Growth of an organism (during childhood for example)
  3. During embryonic development (zygote onward)
  4. Replace existing cells that die naturally
  5. Asexual Reproduction (generating two genetically identical daughter cells)
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3
Q

State the names of the four phases of mitosis.

A

PMAT
- Prophase
- Metaphase
- Anaphase
- Telophase

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4
Q

Draw typical eukaryotic cells as they would appear during the interphase and the four phases of mitosis.

A

Drawn in notebook

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5
Q

Outline four events that occur during prophase.

A
  1. Nuclear membrane begins to break apart
  2. Nucleolus “disappears”
  3. DNA supercoils into replicated chromosomes
  4. Spindle fibers form and centrioles move towards the cell poles
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6
Q

Outline the process of metaphase, inclusive of the role of microtubules and the kinetochore.

A
  1. Replicated chromosomes align at the equator (meta = middle)
  2. A protein complex called kinetochore, located at the centromere, is connectef to microtubules (a type of spindle fiber)
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7
Q

Outline the process of anaphase.

A

The identical chromatids (now unreplicated chromosomes) are pulled towards the poles by motor proteins moving along the kinetochore microtubules.

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8
Q

Outline four events that occur during telophase.

A
  1. Nuclear membrane reforms
  2. Nucleolus reappears
  3. Chromosomes decondeses into chromatin
  4. Spindle Fibers break apart
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9
Q

Describe the structure of a replicated chromosome, including the centromere and sister chromatids.

A

Centromere is the location where two identical strands of DNA (sister chromatids) are attached
Chromosomes are supercoiled identical copies of DNA.

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10
Q

Explain why chromosomes must condense during mitosis.

A

To more easily move to the poles of the cell

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11
Q

Outline events of G1, S, G2 and G0 phases of interphase.

A

G1: cell growth and it performs its specialized functions (protein synthesis)
S: sythesis of DNA
G2: the cell makes the protein required for mitosis and cytokinesis
G0: cell is neither dividing or preparing to divide

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12
Q

Define cytokinesis.

A

It is the division of the cytoplasm of the mother cell into two daughter cells

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13
Q

State the difference between mitosis and cytokinesis

A

Mitosis refers to the division of the nucleus and DNA while cytokinesis refers to the division of the cytoplasm

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14
Q

Contrast cytokinesis in plant and animal cells

A

Animals: Cleavage furrow
Plants: Cell plate

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15
Q

Describe the formation of the cleavage furrow in animal cell cytokinesis

A

A ring of contractile proteins at the cell equator constrict, pulling in the cell membrane and creating a cleavage furrow. The cleavage furrows continues to pinch in until the two sides meet.

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16
Q

​Describe the formation of the middle lamella and cell wall in plant cell cytokinesis

A

The middle lamella is a wall of pectin, which is produced by the Golgi and stored in vesicles. When called upon, they move to the equator of the cell and secrete pectin to form a cell plate that is later going to be coated with celullose to form a cell wall.

17
Q

Explain the role of cyclin and cyclin-CDK complexes in controlling the cell cycle.

A

Cyclins are proteins that the cell’s progression through the cell cycle. They act as switches which turn on CDKs which do the work of moving the cell through the cycle.

18
Q

State the role of cyclins D, B, A and E in the cell cycle.​

A

D (aka G1 cyclin): helps with the progression of the cell through G1 into S
E (aka S cyclin): Essential for DNA replication and centromere duplication
A: Helps induce DNA replication
B: Essential for the formation of mitotic spindles and the alingment of chromatids

19
Q

Define tumor, benign, malignant, metastasis, cancer, mutagen and carcinogen.

A

Tumor: A mass of tissue caused by abnormal growth
Benign: a tumor that lacks the ability to grow and metastasize
Malignant: a tumor that has the ability to spread and metastasize
Metastasis: when cells from a malignant tumor spread to other tissues through blood or lymph vessels
Cancer: a disease caused by malignant tumors
Mutagen: an agent, such as UV radiation, smoking, or radon, that cause genetic mutations
Carcinogen: a substance capable of causing cancer

20
Q

Describe why mutagens are not necessarily carcinogens.

A

Mutagens induce mutations in the DNA, only if that mutation leads to cancer then it is a carcinogen

21
Q

Describe how cancer arises, referring to accumulation of mutations over time.

A

Cells become cancerous after mutations accumulate in the genes that control the cell cycle. Around 60 mutations.

22
Q

Explain the relationship between proto-oncogenes, oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes and cancer.​

A

Proto-oncogenes are normal genes that code for protein (i.e. cyclins) that help the cell move through the cell cycle.
Oncogenes: mutated proto-oncogenes and they move the cell through the cell cycle even when it should not divide
Tumor supressor genes: they function to stop a cell from dividing when it shouldn’t
Cancer develops when both types of genes mutate and the cell divides without control

23
Q

Define significant as related to the relationship between two variables.

A
24
Q

Use epidemiological case study information to outline the relationships between smoking and cancer.​

A
25
Q

Determine the phase of mitosis of a cell viewed in a micrograph or with a microscope.

A

Drawn in notebook

26
Q

State the formula for calculation of a mitotic index.

A

pmat/ipmat

27
Q

Calculate the mitotic index of a tissue as seen in a micrograph.

A

Count the amount of cells in mitosis and divide them by the amount of cells in mitosis and interphase

28
Q

Outline the use of mitotic index calculations in diagnosis and treatment of cancer.

A

If a tissue is shown to have a higher mitotic index then it has cancer