Mitosis Flashcards
What is the purpose of mitosis?
A type of cell division for growth and the repair of damaged tissue
Where does mitosis occur?
In all body/somatic cells except those in sexual organs that undergo meiosis
Describe the key stages of mitosis
- Chromosomes replicate by DNA replication
- The chromosomes shorten, thicken and become visible as chromatids
- The chromatids line up along the cell equator
- The two sister chromatids are separated by spindle fibres
- The cell membrane pinches in and separates the single cell into two identical cells
Before a cell can divide by mitosis, the DNA must replicate. Describe the steps of DNA replication.
- Enzymes unwind the DNA double helix and unzip the two strands by breaking the hydrogen bases between the bases
- A leading strand made up of single free nucleotides is constructed by an enzyme and it is complimentary (A-T, C-G) to one of the original DNA strands.
- A lagging strand made up of okazaki fragments (1000-2000 bases long) is constructed by and enzyme and it is complimentary to the other original DNA strand
- Two new DNA molecules are formed and they wind back into double helixes
Why does DNA replication follow the base pairing rule?
By always following A-T and C-G, the two new DNA molecules will be exactly the same which means each of the two new cells will have the same genetic information so they can carry out their function
Why is it important that the cells are replicated correctly and are identical?
So that each cell has all the genetic information in order for it to carry out its intended function
DNA replication is describe as semi-conservative. What does this mean?
In each of the new DNA molecules, one strand is an original and one is newly made
Why is DNA replication semi-conservative?
Each of the original strands acts as a template form making a new strand. By also following the base pairing rule, the two new DNA molecules will be identical and contain all the genetic information needed to carry out their function.
How do cells know when to divide by mitosis?
When organisms are young so they can grow bigger more quickly
For plants, in spring and summer because temperatures are warmer which makes the enzymes that control mitosis work at a faster rate
Mitosis requires energy so it there is large amounts of ATP provided by respiration
At what stages in life is mitosis faster and why?
When organisms are young so they can grow bigger more quickly
For plants, in spring and summer because temperatures are warmer which makes the enzymes that control mitosis work at a faster rate
Mitosis requires energy so it there is large amounts of ATP provided by respiration
At what locations is mitosis faster and why?
In cells that are likely to be damaged when carrying out their function and need to be replaced e.g. skin cells, liver cells, cheek cells
At the growing tips of shoots and roots to grow higher for more sunlight
Cancer cells - have lost the ability to stop dividing by mitosis