you are looking at dna. you are still looking at dna

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You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA.

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Page 1: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

You are looking at DNA.

You are still looking at DNA.

You are still looking at DNA.

Page 2: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

The shape of the DNA depends on which part of its life the cell is in. Is it just hanging out? Is it getting ready to divide? Is it

actually in the process of dividing?Either way, this is a good way to think about DNA….

Page 3: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

Interphase

Mitosis

A Cell’s Life

“hanging out”

dividing

PMA

T

Page 4: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

The length of a cell’s life depends on what kind of cell it is. For example…

A white blood cell? A few hours.

A skin cell? A few weeks.

A red blood cell? A few months.

Skeletal muscle cells? A few years.

Brain cells? As old as you are…

Page 5: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

So, when your cells (of any type) are just hanging out, they are in interphase.That’s when the DNA in the nucleus looks like this.

But towards the end of interphase, when the cell knows it’s getting time for mitosis, it has to copy the DNA inside of itself before mitosis can go on.

“single” “double”

Page 6: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

When DNA copies itself, it basically has to “unzip” and copy each side.

Page 7: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

Now, it’s time for mitosis (cell division). The first step of mitosis is

PROPHASE

Page 8: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

The second step is

METAPHASE

Page 9: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

The third step is

ANAPHASE

Page 10: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

The fourth step is

TELOPHASE

Page 11: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

And then you’re back to interphase again – except now you have two cells

Page 12: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

Watch mitosis in action

http://www.cellsalive.com/mitosis.htm

Page 13: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

Is mitosis different if it’s not in an animal cell? Not really. The big difference is that instead of pinching, if the cell has a cell

wall, it has to grow a cell plate instead.

Page 14: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

So what is mitosis used for?...

Well, if we’re talking about human beings, we use it to grow and replace old cells. Hopefully, each cell can make two exact copies of itself, and those make exact copies, and so on and so on.

But what about organisms that can reproduce asexually? They use mitosis to basically make a copy of themselves, in order to have offspring. It’s not really like having a baby; it’s more like making a twin of yourself (or cloning yourself).

Page 15: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

Examples of asexual reproduction

fission budding

regeneration

Page 16: You are looking at DNA. You are still looking at DNA

So, the big test:

How many chromosomes does each cell in your human body have?

(And don’t forget, a chromosome can look like an “l” or an “x”)

And when a cell is done going through mitosis, how many chromosomes should the new cell have?

23 pairs

23 pairs