Cell Cycle
Cell Cycle
Cell Cycle
● The actin filaments pull the equator of the cell inward, forming a
fissure. This fissure is called the cleavage furrow. The furrow deepens
two.
● In plant cells, a new cell wall must form between the daughter cells.
● During interphase, the Golgi apparatus accumulates enzymes, structural proteins,
and glucose molecules prior to breaking into vesicles and dispersing throughout
the dividing cell.
● During telophase, these Golgi vesicles are transported on microtubules to form a
phragmoplast (a vesicular structure) at the metaphase plate.
● There, the vesicles fuse and coalesce from the center toward the cell walls; this
structure is called a cell plate.
● As more vesicles fuse, the cell plate enlarges until it merges with the cell walls at
the periphery of the cell.
● Enzymes use the glucose that has accumulated between the membrane layers to
build a new cell wall. The Golgi membranes become parts of the plasma
membrane on either side of the new cell wall
Meiosis and Mitosis
Meiosis Cell DIvision
Chromosome Structure
Chromatine, Chromatid and chromosome
Prophase I: This is a much longer and more complex process than Prophase in
mitosis:
Metaphase I:
Homologous chromosomes (not sister chromatids) separate and move towards opposite
poles of the cell.
Telophase I:
Cytokinesis occurs, resulting in two daughter cells with half the number of
chromosomes (haploid) compared to the parent cell.
Meiosis II
Prophase II:
Metaphase II:
Sister chromatids align at the equator of each daughter cell from Meiosis I.
Sister chromatids separate and move towards opposite poles of each daughter cell.
Telophase II:
Chromosomes decondense.
Cytokinesis occurs in each daughter cell from Meiosis I, resulting in a total of four
haploid granddaughter cells.
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What will happen if cytokinesis does not occur?
● Successful cytokinesis requires the coordination of cytoskeletal,
● Mitosis without cytokinesis results in a cell with more than one nucleus
● Understand how the cell cycle is controlled by mechanisms that are both
internal and external to the cell
● Explain how the three internal “control checkpoints” occur at the end of
G1, at the G2/M transition, and during metaphase
● Describe the molecules that control the cell cycle through positive and
negative regulation
● What will happen if there is no control on the cell division?