9-1 CELLULAR GROWTH DÉJÀ VU What are the 3 parts of the Cell Theory? All living things are made...
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Transcript of 9-1 CELLULAR GROWTH DÉJÀ VU What are the 3 parts of the Cell Theory? All living things are made...
9-1 CELLULAR GROWTH
DÉJÀ VU
What are the 3 parts of the Cell Theory?All living things are made of one or more cellsCells are the smallest unit of living organismsCells arise only from existing cells
Why are cells so small?
Cells grow until they reach their size limit, then they either stop growing or divide.
CELL SIZE LIMITATIONS1.Ratio of Surface Area to
Volume
2.Transport of Substances
3.Cellular Communication
Ratio of Surface Area to Volume
Cellular Reproduction
Surface Area = the area covered by the plasma membraneVolume= the space taken up by the inner contents of the cell (organelles, cytoplasm, nucleus
As the cell grows, its volume increases much more rapidly than the surface area.
Back to Outline
Transport of Substances
So…The cell might have difficulty supplying nutrients and expelling enough waste products. (It gets harder to get the good stuff in and the bad stuff out)
Transport of Substances
THINK ABOUT IT…
Back to Outline
Cellular Communications
Cell size affects the ability of the cell to communicate instructions for cellular functions.
Cellular Reproduction
How do cells stay
small?
CELL CYCLECells reproduce by a cycle of growing and dividing
Each time a cell goes through one complete cycle, it becomes two cells.
REASONS FOR CELL DIVISION:-REPAIR-GROWTH-DEVELOPMENT-ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION-GAMETE FORMATION
About 2 trillion cells are produced by an adult human body every day. This is about 25 million new cells per second!
Cells go through different types of cell division depending on the organism and the reason for the cell dividing.
CHROMOSOMES
“packages of DNA”
Eukaryotic Chromosomes
When genes are being used to make proteins, the DNA is stretched out so it can be easily read. This “relaxed” form of DNA is call chromatin.
As a eukaryotic cell prepares to divide, the DNA associates itself with histone proteins. DNA coils tightly around the proteins and forms a beadlike structure called a nucleosome. Nucleosomes pack together to form thick fibers, forming a chromosome. The “X” chromosome that we are used to seeing is actually two exact copies of one chromosome, each one is called a chromatid. The two chromatids of a chromosome are attached at a point called a centromere.
YARN = TAPE = CLOTHES PIN =
DNA
Genes
Proteins
JOURNAL
Explain the role of chromosomes during cell division.
Mitosis is the stage of the cell cycle during which the cell’s nucleus and nuclear material divide.Cytokinesis is the method by which a cell’s cytoplasm divides, creating a new “daughter” cell with identical nuclei
CELL CYCLE Interphase is the stage during which the cell grows, carries out cellular functions, replicates DNA, and prepares for division.
EUKARYOTIC CELL CYCLE
THINK ABOUT IT…
How can we tell how much time the cell spends in each phase?
THOUGHT QUESTION
How do you think cell division in eukaryotes compares to cell division in bacteria (binary fission)?
PROKARYOTES VS. EUKARYOTES
EUKARYOTESCell Cycle is
the process by which eukaryotic cells reproduce themselves
PROKARYOTES Reproduce by a method called binary fission
1. A
2. B
3. C
4. D
Chapter Diagnostic Questions
A. cytokinesis
B. interphase
C. apoptosis
D. mitosis
Which is not a phase of the cell cycle?
1. A
2. B
3. C
4. D
Which can more efficiently supply nutrients and expel waste products?
A. larger cells
B. smaller cells
C. cells with lower surface area to volume ratio
D. cells shaped like a cube
Section 1 Formative Questions
1. A
2. B
3. C
4. D
At what stage does a cell spend most of its life?
A. cytokinesis
B. interphase
C. mitosis
D. synthesis
Section 1 Formative Questions
1. A
2. B
3. C
4. D
Cellular Reproduction
What happens in the cell during cytokinesis?
A. The cell grows and carries out normal functions.
B. The cell copies its DNA and forms chromosomes.
C. The cell’s nucleus and nuclear material divide.
D. The cell’s cytoplasm divides.
Section 1 Formative Questions
1. A
2. B
3. C
4. D
In what stage of the cell cycle does the cell’s replicated genetic material separate?
A. cytokinesis
B. interphase
C. mitosis
D. prophase
Section 2 Formative Questions
1. A
2. B
3. C
Which cell has the lowest ratio of surface area to volume?
AB
C
Standardized Test Practice
1. A
2. B
3. C
4. D
Standardized Test Practice
At what stage of interphase does the cell take inventory and make sure it is ready for the division of its nucleus?
A. G1
B. S
C. G2
D. M
The Stages of InterphaseG1 (Gap 1) -The cell is growing, carrying out normal cell functions, and preparing to replicate DNA.
Nerve cells, muscle cells, and some other highly specialized cells do not leave the G1 phase, and therefore do not replicate in the body under normal conditions.
S (Synthesis) -The cell copies its DNA in preparation for cell division.
The Stages of Interphase
Cellular Reproduction
G2 (Gap 2) -The cell prepares for the division of its nucleus.
The Stages of Interphase
SURFACE AREA : VOLUME ACTIVITY, PAGE 245
SURFACE AREA LABIs the distance of diffusion the same for all blocks? Explain.
List the cubes in order of size, from largest to smallest. Now list them in order of surface area:volume ratio, from largest to smallest. How do these lists compare?
What is the relationship between surface area:volume ratio and diffusion in a cell?
Are large organisms, such as redwood trees and elephants, large because they contain extra-large cells or just more regular sized cells?