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1/13 DAILY CATALYST PG. 67 GENE REGULATION 1. How many chromosomes are found in a human somatic cell? 2. How many chromatids are in a duplicated chromosome? 3. What stage of mitosis is shown below? How do you know?

11/21 Daily Catalyst

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11/21 Daily Catalyst. 1. How many chromosomes are found in a human somatic cell? 2. How many chromatids are in a duplicated chromosome? 3. What stage of mitosis is shown below? How do you know?. 11/21 Daily Catalyst Answers. 1. How many chromosomes are found in a human somatic cell? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 11/21 Daily Catalyst

1/13 DAILY CATALYST PG. 67 GENE REGULATION

1. How many chromosomes are found in a human somatic cell?

2. How many chromatids are in a duplicated chromosome?

3. What stage of mitosis is shown below? How do you know?

Page 2: 11/21 Daily Catalyst

1/13 DAILY CATALYST PG. 67 GENE REGULATION

1. How many chromosomes are found in a human somatic cell?

46 (23 from mom and 23 from dad) 2. How many chromatids are in a duplicated

chromosome? Two 3. What stage of mitosis is shown below? How do

you know? Anaphase, chromatids are pulled APART

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1/13 CLASS BUSINESS PG. 66 GENE REGULATION

Quiz #16 on Friday Tutoring after school, during 4th period, and during lunch Schedule tutoring sessions with me

Parent Night 1/13 (TONIGHT) Extra Credit for attending 4-6 pm in the Cafeteria

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New studying assignment You are required to study a certain amount of hours per week independently AND

with a group/partner per month Independently= 6 hours per week Group/partner= 4 hours per month Sheet is due at the end of each month on the last Friday (Jan. 30th)

STUDY ASSIGNMENT

Name(s)

Date Time Topic(s) Covered

Notes Signature

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1/13 OBJECTIVE Review the stages of Mitosis and discuss

methods of cell regulation.

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MITOSIS REVIEW

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PG 66. BINARY FISSION What type of cells undergo mitosis?

Eukaryotic- plants and animal cells What about bacteria? Key Point #1: Prokaryotes reproduce by binary

fission Meaning “division in half”

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PG. 66 BINARY FISSION Bacterial DNA is circular in shape Bacterial DNA must be replicated before

cell division Replication begins at the Origin of

Replication A specific site on the chromosome The origins move to opposite end of the

cell The cell begins to elongate The plasma membrane grows inward and

forms two new cells

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PG. 67 GENE REGULATION

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CELL CYCLE REGULATION There is evidence towards cytoplasmic

signals that control the cell cycle. Key Point #1: Cell cycle control: a set of molecules in

the cell that both trigger and coordinates the CC. Regulated at certain checkpoints

(Like a dishwashing machine)

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CELL CYCLE REGULATION Key Point #2: Checkpoint: a control point where stop and go

signals exist Checkpoints register signals form inside and

outside the cell if the cell cycle should proceed OR STOP

3 checkpoints: G1, G2, and M phase

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CELL CYCLE REGULATION G1 check point: AKA the “restriction point” Most important checkpoint GO(green light): complete G1, S, G2, and M phases STOP: Exit the cycle and switch into a non dividing

state (G0) Most cells are in the G0 phase Mature nerve cells do no need to divide

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CELL CYCLE REGULATION Cyclin-dependent Kinases (Cdks): Activate or inactivate other proteins

Checkpoint at G1 and G2 Cyclin: cyclically fluctuating

concentration Kinase: activate or inactivate

proteins by giving them a phosphate group

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MPF MPF: maturation-promoting factor

M-phase promoting factor Triggers the cell’s passage past

the G2 checkpoint into M phase When cyclin is high during G2,

this causes MPF to phosphorylates other proteins.

During anaphase, MPF switches itself off

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PDGF Made by platelets PDGF binds to a receptor and this triggers G1 checkpoint

and get ready to divide IN HEALING!

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CANCER Cancel cells do not heed the normal signals that

regulate the cell cycle. They divide excessively and invade other tissues. If unchecked, they can kill organisms.

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CANCER Cancer cells do not stop dividing

when growth factors are depleted. Cancer cells may make their own

growth factors!

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PROCESS OF A CANCEROUS CELL Cell

Transformation: a normal cell converts into a cancer cell Immune system will cell the

transformed cell, if not, the cell will rapidly divide and form a tumor Benign tumor: not dangerous tumor Malignant tumor: invasive and

starts to impair normal function (cancer) Cancer cells metastasize: spread

from original location

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MITOSIS REVIEW Label each picture of mitosis:

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CELL REGULATION REVIEW