Cell Division-Mitosis Notes: 2 New Cells
Cell Division-Mitosis Notes: 2 New Cells
Cell Division-Mitosis Notes: 2 New Cells
2
Daughter
Cells
Parent Cell
• Many organisms, especially unicellular
organisms, reproduce by means of cell division –
called asexual reproduction – Ex: bacteria
DNA
• DNA is located in the nucleus and controls all cell
activities including cell division
• Long and thread-like DNA in a non-dividing cell is called
chromatin
• Doubled, coiled, short DNA in a dividing cell is called
chromosome
Consists of 2 parts: chromatid and centromere
o 2 identical “sister”
chromatids attached at
an area in the middle
called a centromere
Chromatin
Coils up into
Duplicates
chromosomes
itself
Why does DNA need to change
More efficient division
from chromatin to chromosome?
Chromosome number
• Every organism has its own specific number of
chromosomes
Examples: Human = 46 chromosomes or 23 pairs
Dog = 78 chromosomes or 39 pairs
Goldfish = 94 chromosomes or 47 pairs
Lettuce = 18 chromosomes or 9 pairs
• All somatic (body) cells in an organism have the same
kind and number of chromosomes
Anaphase—(Apart)
Anaphase—(Apart) Telophase—(Two)
Prophase
·Chromosomes coil
up
·Nuclear envelope
disappears
·Spindle fibers form
Metaphase—(Middle)
·Chromosomes line up
in middle of cell
·Spindle fibers connect
to chromosomes
Anaphase—(Apart)
·Chromosome
copies divide
·Spindle fibers pull
chromosomes to
opposite poles
Telophase—(Two)
·Chromosomes uncoil
·Nuclear envelopes
form
·2 new nuclei are
formed
·Spindle fibers
disappear
Cytokinesis — the division of the rest of the cell
(cytoplasm and organelles) after the nucleus
divides
In animal cells the cytoplasm
pinches in
Nuclear envelope
Prophase Chromosomes coil up disappears, spindle fibers
form
Chromosomes line up in Spindle fibers connect to
Metaphase
the middle chromosomes