Mitosis and Meiosis

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MITOSIS and MEIOSIS

 Except in certain viruses, every living thing contains a


substance called the genetic material which is
composed of the nucleic acid, DNA.
 DNA has an underlying linear structure possessing
segments called genes, the products of which direct
the metabolic activities of cells.
Chromosome is a structure where an organism’s DNA,
with its arrays of genes, is organized.
 It serves as vehicle for transmitting genetic
information.
The manner in which chromosomes are transmitted
from one generation of cells to the next and from
organisms to their descendants must be exceedingly
precise.
Major processes involved in the genetic continuity of
nucleated cells.
- Although the mechanisms of the two processes are
similar in many ways, but the outcomes are quite
different.
1) Mitosis is a process that leads to the production of
two cells, each with the same number of chromosomes
as the parent cell.
 It is that portion of the cell cycle during which the
hereditary components are equally partitioned
into daughter cells.
2) Meiosis is a process that reduces the genetic content
and number of chromosomes by precisely half.
This is essential in sexual reproduction so as to ensure
that no doubling of the amount of genetic material in
each new generation will occur.
 Meiosis is part of a special type of cell division that
leads to the production of sex cells: gametes or
spores.
This process is a necessary step in the transmission of
genetic information from an organism to its offspring.
 Chromosomes are visible only during mitosis and
meiosis.
 When cells are not undergoing cell division, its
genetic material making up chromosomes unfolds
and uncoils into a diffuse network within the nucleus,
generally referred to as chromatin.
Prior to 1940, knowledge of cell structure was limited
to what could be seen with the aid of a light
microscope.
1940 - transmission electron microscope was in its
early stages of development.
1950 - many details of cell ultrastructure had emerged.
- Under the electron microscope, cells were seen as
highly varied, highly organized structures whose
form and function are dependent on specific genetic
expression by each cell type.
 A new world of whorled membranes, organelles,
microtubules, granules, and filaments was revealed.
These discoveries revolutionized thinking in the entire
field of biology.
Many cell components, such as the nucleolus,
ribosome, and centriole, are involved directly or
indirectly with genetic processes.
 Mitochondria and chloroplasts— contain their own
unique genetic information.
Figure 1 compares plant and animal cell.
Figure 1.a. Parts of a generalized Figure 1.b. B. Parts of a generalized
animal cell. plant Cell
Plasma membrane is an outer covering that surrounds
all cells.
It defines the cell boundary and delimits the cell from
its immediate external environment.
This membrane is not passive but instead actively
controls the movement of materials into and out of
the cell.
 Cell wall is an outer covering in plants cells whose
major component is a polysaccharide called cellulose.
Glycocalyx or cell coat is a covering over the plasma
membrane of most animal cells.
This covering is consist of glycoproteins and
polysaccharides with a chemical composition that
differs from comparable structures in either plants or
bacteria.
It provides biochemical identity at the surface of cells.
The components of the coat that establish cellular
identity are under genetic control.
Example:
Various cell identity markers such as the: AB, Rh, and
MN antigens are found on the surface of red blood
cells, among other cell types.
Histocompatibility antigens - elicit an immune
response during tissue and organ transplants, are
present on the surface of other cells
Receptor molecules act as recognition sites that
transfer specific chemical signals across the cell
membrane into the cell and are varied.
 Living organisms are categorized into two major
groups depending on whether or not their cells
contain a nucleus.
Eukaryotes possess nucleus and other membranous
Organelles.
The nucleus in eukaryotic cells is a membrane-bound
structure that houses the genetic material, DNA.
DNA is complexed with an array of acidic and basic
proteins into thin fibers.
 During nondivisional phases of the cell cycle, the
fibers are uncoiled and dispersed in the form of a
grainy material (dust-like) called chromatin.
 During mitosis and meiosis, chromatin fibers coil and
condense into short, double stranded chromosomes.
Nucleolus is an amorphous component inside the
nucleus where ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is synthesized
and where the initial stages of ribosomal assembly
occur.
Nucleolus Organizer Region (NOR) is the portions of
DNA that encode rRNA.
Prokaryotes lack a nuclear envelope and membranous
organelle.
It has two major groups:
a) eubacteria (or the true bacteria),
b) archaea, the more ancient bacteria.
Nucleoid is the genetic material of Eubacteria such as
Escherichia coli, which is a long, circular DNA molecule
that is compacted into an unenclosed region.
 Part of the DNA may be attached to the cell
membrane, but in general the nucleoid extends
through a large part of the cell.
 The compacted DNA does not undergo the extensive
coiling characteristic of the stages of mitosis, where
in during which the chromosomes of eukaryotes
become visible.
 NOR is the DNA associated as extensively with
proteins as is eukaryotic DNA.
Figure. 2 shows two bacteria forming by cell division,
illustrates the nucleoid regions containing the bacterial
chromosomes.
Figure 2. Color –enhanced
electron micrograph of
Escherichia coli undergoing cell
division. Particularly prominent
are the two chromosomal areas
(shown in red), called nucleoids,
That have been partitioned into the
daughter cells.
Prokaryotic cells do not have a distinct nucleolus
but it contain genes that specify rRNA molecules.
Cytoplasm includes all the part of the eukaryotic
cell within the plasma membrane excluding the
nucleus.
- It includes a variety of extranuclear cellular
organelles.
Cytosol is a nonparticulate, colloidal material that
surrounds and encompasses the cellular organelles
within the cytoplasm.
Cytoskeleton is an extensive system of tubules and
filaments which are held together and linked to
subcellular organelles and the plasma membrane by a
variety of accessory proteins and provides a lattice of
support structures within the cell.
Principal types of protein filaments that composes the
Cytoskeleton
a) Microtubules
b) Intermediate filaments
c) Actin filaments
- this structural framework maintains cell shape,
facilitates cell mobility, and anchors the various
organelles.
Figure 3 shows the types of protein filaments.
Figure 3. Fluorescent micrographs of Cytoskeletal Filaments. A. Actin is
stained red, mitochondria green, and DNA blue. B. Tubulin, the protein that
makes up microtubule is stained green and DNA blue. C. Keratin, an
intermediate filament protein, is stained green.
Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER) is a membranous
organelle that compartmentalizes the cytoplasm,
greatly increasing the surface area available for
biochemical synthesis.
The ER appears smooth in places where it
serves as the site for synthesizing fatty acids and
phospholipids; in other places, it appears rough
- because it is studded with ribosomes.
Ribosomes serve as sites where genetic information
contained in messenger RNA (mRNA) is translated into
proteins.
Mitochondria are found in most eukaryotes, including
both animal and plant cells, and are the sites of the
oxidative phases of cell respiration.
These chemical reactions generate large amounts of
- the energy-rich molecule adenosine triphosphate
(ATP).
 Chloroplasts, which are found in plants, algae, and
some protozoans, are associated with
photosynthesis, the major energy-trapping process
on Earth.
- Both mitochondria and chloroplasts contain DNA in
a form distinct from that found in the nucleus.
They are able to duplicate themselves and transcribe
and translate their own genetic information.
Centrioles is a pair of complex structures present in
animal cells and some plant cells.
These cytoplasmic bodies are associated with the
organization of spindle fibers that function in mitosis
and meiosis.
Centrosome is a specialized region in the cell where the
centrioles are located opposite each other.
Basal body is a structure present in some organisms,
where the centriole arise which is associated with the
formation of cilia and flagella (hair-like and whip-like
structures for propelling cells or moving materials).
- The organization of spindle fibers by the centrioles
occurs during the early phases of mitosis and meiosis.
These fibers play an important role in the movement
of chromosomes as they separate during cell division.
- They are composed of arrays of microtubules
consisting of polymers of the protein tubulin.
 Chromosomes are most easily visualized during
mitosis.
- When they are examined carefully, distinctive lengths
and shapes are apparent.
Centromere is the constricted region in the
chromosome whose location establishes the general
appearance of each chromosome.
- Table 1 shows chromosomes with centromere
placements at different distances along their length.
 Extending from either side of the centromere are the
arms of the chromosome.
- Depending on the position of the centromere,
different arm ratios are produced.
Classification of chromosomes on the basis of the
centromere location.
a. metacentric
b. submetacentric
c. acrocentric
d. telocentric
Table 1. Centromere locations and the chromosome designations that are based on them.
Note that the shape of the chromosome during anaphase is determined by the position of
the centromere during metaphase.
p arm (p, for “petite”) is the shorter arm, by
convention, is shown above the centromere.
q arm is the longer arm is shown below the centromere
(q because it is the next letter in the alphabet).
Observations in the study of Mitosis that are of particular
relevance.
1) All somatic cells (body cells) derived from members of
the same species contain an identical number of
chromosomes.
In most cases, represents diploid number (2n).
- When the lengths and centromere placements of all
such chromosomes are examined,
2) With the exception of sex chromosomes, they exist
in pairs and the members of each pair are called
homologous chromosomes.
- Each chromosome exhibiting a specific length and
centromere placement, exhibits identical features.
An exceptions to this observation are:
1) Many bacteria and viruses have but one
chromosome.
2) Yeasts and molds, and certain plants such as
bryophytes (mosses), spend the predominant
phase of their life cycle in the haploid stage.
- They contain only one member of each homologous
pair of chromosomes during most of their lives.
Figure 4 shows Karyotype of Human chromosome.
Figure 4. A metaphase preparation of chromosomes derived from a dividing cell of a human male
(right), and the karyotype derived from the metaphase preparation (left). All but the X and Y
chromosomes are present in homologous pairs. Each chromosome is clearly a double structure
consisting of a pair of sister chromatids joined by a common centromere.
Karyotype is a created display showing the physical
appearance of different pairs of homologous
chromosomes wherein the human mitotic
chromosomes have been photographed, cut out of the
print, and matched up.
The haploid number (n) of chromosomes is equal to
one-half the diploid number.
 Collectively, the genetic information contained in a
haploid set of chromosomes constitutes the genome
of the species that includes copies of all genes as well
as a large amount of noncoding DNA.
- Examples listed in Table 2 demonstrate the wide range
- of n values found in plants and animals.
 Homologous chromosomes have important genetic
similarities.
- They contain identical gene sites along their lengths;
Locus (pl. loci) is the site where the genes are located in
the chromosome.
- Therefore they are identical in the traits that they
influence and in their genetic potential.
In sexually reproducing organisms, one member of
each pair is derived from the maternal parent
(through the ovum) and the other member is derived
from the paternal parent (through the sperm).
 Each diploid organism contains two copies of each
gene as a consequence of biparental inheritance.
Biparental inheritance is inheritance from two parents.
Alleles refers to the alternative forms of the same gene
present in a population of members of the same species
 The concepts of haploid number, diploid number,
and homologous chromosomes are important for
understanding the process of meiosis.
 During the formation of gametes or spores, meiosis
converts the diploid number of chromosomes to the
haploid number.
- As a result, haploid gametes or spores contain
precisely one member of each homologous pair of
- chromosomes—that is, one complete haploid set.
- Following fusion of two gametes at fertilization, the
diploid number is reestablished; that is, the zygote
contains two complete haploid sets of chromosomes.
- The constancy of genetic material is thus maintained
from generation to generation.
An important exception to the concept of homologous
pairs of chromosomes is:
 In many species, one pair, consisting of the sex-
determining chromosomes, is often not homologous
in size, centromere placement, arm ratio, or genetic
content.
Example:
In humans, while females carry two homologous X
chromosomes, males carry one Y chromosome in
addition to one X chromosome.
- These X and Y chromosomes are not strictly
homologous.
- The Y is considerably smaller and lacks most of the
gene loci contained on the X.
- Inspite of that, they contain homologous regions and
behave as homologs in meiosis so that gametes
produced by males receive either one X or one Y
chromosome.

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