2.6 Cell Cycle Flashcards
What is the overall cell cycle of a eukaryotic cell?
- Interphase (G0 , G1)
- S phase
- G2 phase
- Mitosis (PMAT)
- Cytokinesis
What is the purpose of checkpoints within the cell cycle?
To prevent uncontrolled division (cancer) and to detect and repair damage in DNA
What is the Hayflick constant?
Cells generally only undergo up to 50 divisions before it stops dividing
What happens at the M phase?
Cell growth stops and the cell undergoes the stages of Mitosis (PMAT) followed by cytokinesis
What happens at the M phase checkpoint?
Chemical triggers condensation of chromatin
Ensures the cell is ready for Mitosis
What happens during the G0 phase?
Cell may undergo apoptosis, differentiation or senescence.
Neurons and other cells can stay in this phase for a long time or indefinitely
What happens during the G1 phase?
cells grow in size
transcription of gene to make RNA
organelles duplicate
biosynthesis
What happens at the G1 checkpoint?
to check the cell is ready to enter the S phase
What happens at the S phase?
DNA replicates
(creates a pair of identical sister chromatids)
rapid, susceptible to mutations
what happens at the G2 phase and checkpoint?
cells grow
special chemicals are used to check the cell is ready for mitosis
^ these chemicals can be used to make chromosomes condense and form spindle fibers
hopefully you haven’t lost ur sheets on mitosis and meiosis, using them is better than this
but anyways where does genetic mutation occur in mitosis?
What is it called when 2 chromosomes have the same genes in the same place?
homologous chromosomes
Why do animals need specialized cells?
Animals have a small surface area to volume ratio and cannot directly diffuse oxygen into them so need means to do so
What specialised animal cells are there?
erythrocytes
neutrophils
spermatozoa
epithelial cells
What is an example of an erythrocyte?
a red blood cell