Lecture 3: Cell Division Flashcards
Phases of the cell cycle
- G0: cell cycle arrest, non-replicative (many differentiated cells remain in G0)
- G1: cellular contents, excluding the chromosomes are duplicated (prep for division)
- S: DNA synthesis/replication, each of the 46 chromosomes is duplicated by the cell
- G2: a short resting phase before cell division
- Mitosis: cell division
Describe the difference in cell division between somatic and gametic cells
- somatic: division occurs by mitosis to produce diploid cells (2n)
- gametic: meiosis produces gametes which are haploid (n)
Describe chromosomes
- made of 2 chromatids
- held together at centromere
Describe the cell during G1, S and G2 compared to mitosis
- during G1, S, and G2 the nuclear envelope is intact and no chromosomes are visible
- nuclear envelope disintegrates during mitosis
Centrosome
microtubule organising centre, seeds outward growths of polar fibers
Centromere
specific DNA sequence that is essential for segregation during cell division
Meiosis
- pattern of cell division producing gametes
- germline cells are haploid
- DNA is copied once into 46 chromosomes and then meiosis splits this back to 23 chromosomes and then you have another division to form 4 daughter cells (n) (single chromatid/cell)
What are the steps of meiosis?
- Interphase: chromosomes duplicate
- Prophase I: homologous chromosomes pair and exchange segments (recombination between maternal and paternal chromosomes (homologs))
- Metaphase I: tetrads line up at metaphase plate (2 chromatids x 2 homologous chromosomes), random segregation of paternal and maternal chromosomes (independent assortment)
- Anaphase I: pairs of homologous chromosomes split up via spindle fibres pulling on complete chromosome (2 chromatids) to either pole
- Telophase & Cytokinesis: two haploid cells form (chromosomes are still double)
- Meiosis II: separates sister chromatids (results in four haploid cells with each cell containing a single chromosome)
Genetic diversity in meiosis
generated by 2 processes:
- recombination (physical breakage of DNA duplex in one maternal and one paternal chromatid and joining of the ends, sequences are exchanged but DNA sequences are neither gained nor lost unless a mistake is made (non-disjunction)
- independent assortment: each bivalent is a 4 stranded structure (4 chromatids), the mitotic spindle pulls 2 chromatids towards each pole randomly
Chiasmata
- each chiasma marks a crossing over point
- on avg 55 chiasmata/cell in human male meiosis
- important for correct chromosome segregation at meiosis I
- holds homologs together until align along plate and formation of spindle until anaphase
What is usually the cause of children with incorrect chromosome numbers?
often the products of gametes where bivalent lacked crossovers
Fertilisation
sperm and egg chromosomes combine during the first mitosis forming a diploid zygote. Further rounds of mitosis and differentiation form the whole organism
Describe the production of primary oocytes and primary spermatocytes
the germ-line develops by repeated mitotic divisions of diploid cells, leading to the production of primary oocytes and spermatocytes, which then undergo meiosis
Describe primary oocytes
primary oocytes form during fatal life but arrest at prophase of meiosis I until puberty. after puberty, one oocyte/month completes meiosis. they also display asymmetric cell division
Describe the distribution of genetic material within diploid cells
2 copies of each gene, 1 per chromosome copy, each gene is called an allele