What are the three stages of the cell cycle?
What does mitosis produce?
Two daughter cells that have the same chromosomes as the parent cell as well as each other
What happens at interphase?
what happens at prophase?
In prophase of mitosis, how do you know centrioles are not essential to spindle fibre formation
As plant cells lack centrioles yet still develop the spindle apparatus
What happens at metaphase?
What happens at anaphase?
What happens at telophase and cytokinesis ?
What are the three sub phases of interphase?
On a graph, how can you determine where the S phase of interphase is happening?
By looking at where the amount of DNA in the cell doubles
In what stage of the cell cycle do chromosomes become visible in the cell?
After the DNA has been replicated in interphase so at the start of prophase the chromosomes become visible
What is mitotic index?
The % of cells that are in mitosis
How do you calculate the mitotic index?
Mitotic index = # of cells in mitosis / # of total cells
Around how much of the time a mammals cell cycle takes is interphase?
90%
What is cancer? What is it a result of?
A group of diseases (around 200 in total) caused by a growth disorder of cells as a result of damage to the genes that regulate the cell cycle and mitosis
When does a tumour become cancerous?
If it changes from benign to malignant
Name 4 organs where tumours are most commonly found
Lungs, prostate gland, breast and ovaries and stomach
What controls the rate of mitosis and what can meme its uncontrollable?
Two types of gene control mitosis and it can become uncontrollable if there is a mutation to one of these genes
What happens to cells after they are mutated?
Most die but the ones that do survive are capable of dividing to form clones of themselves and form tumours.
What’s the difference between malignant tumours and benign tumours?
Malignant tumours grow rapidly, are less compact and are more likely to be life threatening while benign tumours are more slow growing, more compact and are less likely to be life threatening
How do the drugs used to kill cancer (chemotherapy) usually disrupt the cell cycle?
- inhibiting the metaphase stage of mitosis by interfering with the spindle formation
What is a draw-back of chemotherapy?
Despite the drugs are more effective against rapidly dividing cells, they can also disrupt the cell cycle of normal cells.
What is apoptosis and when can it happen?
Apoptosis = programmed cell death
It can happen when there are gene mutations in the genes that control the cell cycle
In the core practical, why do you place the plant root tissue in ethanoic alcohol and concentrated HCL?
As this stops cell division and hydrolyses the middle lamella so that the cells can be separated easily