Ch 9: The Cell Cycle COPY Flashcards

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1
Q

Animal cytokinesis (does/ does not) involve the fusion of Golgi-derived vesicles.

A

does not

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2
Q

Microfilaments play a role in animal cytokinesis but not in _____ cytokinesis.

A

plant

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3
Q

The new separating plasma membrane (during the process of cytokinesis) is pulled inward in animals but grows outward in plants.

A
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4
Q

Animal cytokinesis produces no new cell wall regions, while plant cytokinesis does.

A
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5
Q

The cell cycle control system has been compared to the control device of a washing machine (Figure 9.15). Like the washer’s timing device, the cell cycle control system proceeds on its own, according to a built-in clock. However, just as a washer’s cycle is subject to both internal control (such as the sensor that detects when the tub is filled with water) and external adjustment (such as starting the machine), the cell cycle is regulated at certain checkpoints by both _______ and ________ signals.

A

internal
external

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6
Q

In the middle of the M phase, after prometaphase, the checkpoint M happens. Without full __________ __________ (to the mitotic spindle apparatus), a stop signal is received.

A

chromosome attachment

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7
Q

Platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), which is made by blood cell fragments called platelets. The experiment (illustrated in Figure 9.17) demonstrates that PDGF is required for the division of cultured fibroblasts, a type of connective tissue cell. Fibroblasts have PDGF receptors on their plasma membranes. The binding of PDGF molecules to these receptors triggers a signal transduction pathway that allows the cells to pass the G1 checkpoint and divide. PDGF stimulates __________ ________ not only in the artificial conditions of cell culture, but also in an animal’s body. When an injury occurs, platelets release PDGF in the vicinity. The resulting proliferation of fibroblasts helps heal the wound.

A

fibroblast division

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8
Q

The effect of an external physical factor on cell division is clearly seen in _______-_________ inhibition, a phenomenon in which crowded cells stop dividing.

A

density-dependent

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9
Q

Cancer cells often don’t follow the “rule” of density-dependent inhibition.

A
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10
Q

Within the nucleus of a ___________ ____, the DNA is organized into discrete units called chromosomes, structures that carry the genetic information. Each chromosome contains one long DNA molecule associated with many proteins.

A

non-dividing cell

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11
Q

Microtubules—hollow rods constructed from globular proteins called ________—shape and support the cell and serve as tracks along which organelles equipped with motor proteins can move.

A

tubulins

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12
Q

Protein phosphorylation causes a _____ ______ in the phosphorylated protein. The shape change results from the interaction of the newly added phosphate groups with charged or polar amino acids on the protein being phosphorylated. The shape change alters the function of the protein, most often activating it, but in some cases phosphorylation instead decreases the activity of the protein.

A

shape change

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13
Q

A typical human cell has about ___ of DNA – a length about 250,000 times greater than the cell’s diameter.

A

2 m

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14
Q

Where does the term chromosome come from?

A

Greek words ‘chroma’ meaning color, and ‘soma’ meaning body. They were named this because they take up certain dyes in microscopy.

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15
Q

Together, the entire complex of DNA and proteins that is the building material of chromosomes is referred to as _______.

A

chromatin

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16
Q

What is meant by the term “somatic cells” of the human body?

A

All the body’s cells except for reproductive cells.

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17
Q

All human somatic cells contain __ chromosomes, or two sets of __ chromosomes, one set inherited from each parent.

A

46
23

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18
Q

The number of chromosomes in somatic cells varies widely across species: __ in cabbage plants, __ in chimpanzees, __ in elephants.

A

18
48
56

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19
Q

After DNA replication, chromosomes ________ as a part of cell division. Each chromatin fiber becomes densely ______ and folded, making the chromosomes much shorter, and so thick that we can see them with a light microscope.

A

condense
coiled

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20
Q

Each duplicated chromosome consists of two ______ __________, which are joined copies of the original chromosome.

A

sister chromatids

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21
Q

The two sister chromatids, each containing an identical DNA molecule, are typically attached all along their lengths by protein complexes called ________; this attachment is known as ______ _________ ________.

A

cohesins
sister chromatid cohesion

22
Q

What is the centromere of the sister chromatid?

A

a region (made up of repetitive sequences) in the chromosomal DNA where the chromatid is most closely attached to its sister chromatid

23
Q

_______, the division of genetic material in the nucleus, is usually followed immediately by ___________, the division of the cytoplasm.

A

Mitosis
cytokinesis

24
Q

Approximately how many somatic cells are in your body?

A

37 trillion

25
Q

The mitotic (M) phase of a cell, which includes both mitosis and cytokinesis, is usually the ________ part of the cell cycle. It alternates with a much longer phase called __________, which often accounts for about 90% of the cell cycle.

A

shortest
interphase

26
Q

What are the 3 phases of interphase?

A
G1 phase (1st gap)
S phase (synthesis)
G2 phase (2nd gap)
27
Q

What occurs in its entirely during the S phase?

A

duplication of the chromosomes

28
Q

During what phases are the sister chromatids present?

Note: Assume that by the end of the M phase, the parent cell has not yet divided to form two daughter cells.

A
29
Q

During what phases is the DNA condensed?

Note: Assume that by the end of the M phase, the parent cell has not yet divided to form two daughter cells.

A
30
Q

Does the cell contain twice as much DNA in this phase as it did in the G1 phase?

Note: Assume that by the end of the M phase, the parent cell has not yet divided to form two daughter cells.

A
31
Q

Mitosis unfolds through a sequence of stages marked by specific events in the cell. The structural changes in the cell are brought about by a series of tightly coordinated underlying mechanisms.

Sort each process into the appropriate bin to indicate the stage of mitosis in which it occurs. If a process occurs in more than one stage, sort it to the stage when it first occurs.

A
32
Q

During prophase, the microtubules of the mitotic spindle ________.

A

lengthen

33
Q

During anaphase, the nonkinetochore microtubules ________ and move past each other, and the kinetochore microtubules _______.

A

lengthen

shorten

34
Q

During telophase, the nonkinetochore microtubules ___________.

A

disassemble

35
Q

Crossing over during meiosis, resulting in an increase in genetic variation, occurs between _____.

a. ) nonsister chromatids of nonhomologous chromosomes b.) sex cells and somatic cells
c. ) nonsister chromatids of homologous chromosomes d.) sister chromatids of homologous chromosomes
e. ) sister chromatids of nonhomologous chromosomes

A

c.) nonsister chromatids of homologous chromosomes

36
Q

In human gamete production there is an average of _____ crossover events per chromosome pair.

A

2-3

37
Q

in animal cells, the assembly of spindle microtubules starts at the __________, the cell’s microtubule-organizing center.

A

centrosome

38
Q

Are centrioles present in plant cells?

A

no

39
Q

The spindle includes the…

A

…centrosomes, the spindle microtubules, and the asters.

40
Q

What is a kinetochore?

A

(kuh-netʹ-uh-kōr) A structure of proteins attached to the centromere that links each sister chromatid to the mitotic spindle.

41
Q

Meanwhile, microtubules that do not attach to kinetochores have been elongating, and by metaphase they overlap and interact with other nonkinetochore microtubules from the opposite pole of the spindle.

A
42
Q

Anaphase begins suddenly when the cohesins holding together the sister chromatids of each chromosome are cleaved by an enzyme called ________. Once separated, the chromatids become __________ chromosomes that move toward opposite ends of the cell.

A

separase
individual

43
Q

An experiment done at the University of Wisconsin demonstrated that during anaphase in this cell type, chromosome movement is correlated with kinetochore microtubules shortening at their ___________ ____ and not at their spindle pole ends. This experiment supports the hypothesis that during anaphase, a chromosome is walked along a microtubule as the microtubule depolymerizes at its kinetochore end, releasing _______ ________.

A

kinetochore ends
tubulin subunits

44
Q

In a dividing animal cell, the nonkinetochore microtubules are responsible for elongating the whole cell during ________. Nonkinetochore microtubules from opposite poles _______ each other extensively during metaphase

A

anaphase
overlap

45
Q

At the end of anaphase, duplicate groups of chromosomes have arrived at opposite ends of the elongated parent cell. ______ re-form during telophase. Cytokinesis generally begins during anaphase or telophase, and the spindle eventually disassembles by ____________ of microtubules.

A

Nuclei
depolymerization

46
Q

In animal cells, cytokinesis occurs by a process known as cleavage. The first sign of cleavage is the appearance of a cleavage furrow, a shallow groove in the cell surface near the old metaphase plate. On the cytoplasmic side of the furrow is a ___________ ring of actin microfilaments associated with molecules of the protein ______.

A

contractile
myosin

47
Q

Cytokinesis in plant cells, which have cell walls, is markedly different. There is no ________ ______. Instead, during telophase, vesicles derived from the Golgi apparatus move along microtubules to the middle of the cell, where they coalesce, producing a cell plate. Cell wall materials carried in the vesicles collect inside the cell plate as it grows. The cell plate enlarges until its surrounding membrane fuses with the plasma membrane along the perimeter of the cell. Two daughter cells result, each with its own plasma membrane. Meanwhile, a new ____ ____ arising from the contents of the cell plate forms between the daughter cells.

A

cleavage furrow
cell wall

48
Q

Binary Fission in Bacteria:

Prokaryotes (bacteria and archaea) undergo a type of reproduction in which the cell grows to roughly double its size and then divides to form two cells. The term binary fission, meaning “________ __ ____,” refers to this process and to the asexual reproduction of single-celled eukaryotes, such as the amoeba. However, the process in eukaryotes involves _______, while that in prokaryotes does not.

A

division in half

mitosis

49
Q

A __________ in the cell cycle is a control point where stop and go-ahead signals can regulate the cycle. Animal cells generally have built-in stop signals that halt the cell cycle at checkpoints until overridden by go-ahead signals.

A

checkpoint

50
Q

These signals report whether crucial cellular processes that should have occurred by that point have in fact been completed correctly and thus whether or not the cell cycle should proceed. Checkpoints also register signals from outside the cell, as we’ll discuss later. (The signals are transmitted within the cell by the kinds of signal transduction pathways discussed in Concept 5.6.) Three important checkpoints are those in the G1, G2, and M phases (red gates in Figure 9.15).

A
51
Q

Mature nerve and muscle cells never divide. They are perpetually in the G0 state.

A
52
Q

Which of the following does NOT need to happen during a successful mitotic cell division?

A. The DNA must condense fully so that the chromosomes are compact.

B. Exchange of DNA between homologous chromosomes must happen before metaphase.

C. Microtubules must be assembled as part of the spindle apparatus.

D. Each of the chromosomes must start mitosis containing two sister DNA molecules.

A

B.

Rationale: (A) is true, this must happen. Meiosis is specialized for gamete cells, and has two rounds. Answer (A) is true for both meiosis and mitosis.

Answer (B) - homologous chromosomes pair up and exchange DNA only in MEIOSIS.

(C) is true, this must happen.

(D) is true, this must happen.