Mitosis
and Meiosis
Introduction
All new cells
come from previously existing cells. New cells are
formed by the process of cell division which involves both replication of the
cell's nucleus (karyokinesis) and division of
the cytoplasm( cytokinesis).
There are two types of
nuclear division: mitosis and meiosis. Mitosis
typically results in new somatic (body ) cells. Formation
of an adult organism from a fertilized egg, asexual reproduction, regeneration,
and maintenance or repair of body parts are accomplished through mitotic cell
division. Meiosis results in the formation of
either gametes (in animals) or spores ( in plants). These
cells have half the chromosome number of the parent cell. You
will study meiosis in Exercise 3B. Where does one find
cells undergoing meiosis? Plants and animals differ in
this respect. In higher plants the process of forming
new cells is restricted to special growing regions called meristems. These regions usually occur at the tips of stems or roots. In animals, cell division occurs anywhere new cells are
formed or as new cells replace old ones. However, some
tissues in both plant and animals rarely divide once the organism is mature.
Exercise
3A.1: Observing Mitosis in Plant and Animal Cells Using Prepared Slides of the Onion
Root Tip and Whitefish Blastula
Figure 3.1 Close up view of different
stages of mitosis in an onion root tip:


Figure 3.2 Whitefish Blastula

Procedure:
Examine
prepared slides of either onion root tips or whitefish blastula. Locate the meristematic region of the onion, or locate the
blastula with 10X objective, and then use the 40X objective to study individual
cells. Identify one cell which clearly represents each
phase of mitosis. Sketch and label the cell in the
box provided.
1. The non dividing
cell is in a stage called interphase. The nucleus
may have one or more dark-stained nucleoli and is filled with a fine
network of threads, the chromatin. During interphase,
DNA replication occurs.
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Interphase
2. The first signs of
cell division occurs in prophase. There is a
thickening of the chromatin threads, which will continue until it is evident
that the chromatin has condensed into chromosomes. With
somewhat higher magnification you may be able to see the two chromatids
held together by the centromere. As prophase
continues , the chromatids continue to thicken and shorten. The
nuclear envelope disappears and the beginnings of the spindle apparatus begin
to appear.
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Prophase
3. At metaphase,
the chromosome pairs have moved to the center of the spindle.
One particular part of each chromosome, the centromere, attaches to the
spindle. The centromeres of all the chromosomes lie
about the same level of the spindle called the metaphase plate.
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Metaphase
4. At the beginning of
anaphase, the centromere regions of each pair of chromatids separate and
are moved by the spindle fibers toward opposite poles of the spindle, dragging
the rest of the chromatid behind them. Once each
chromatid is separate it is called a chromosome.
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Anaphase
5. Telophase,
the last stage of division, is marked by a pronounced condensation of the
chromosomes, followed by the formation of a new nuclear envelope around each
group of chromosomes. The chromosomes gradually uncoil
into the fine threads of chromatin, and the nucleoli reappears. Cytokinesis may occur. This
is the division of the cytoplasm into two new cells. In
plants, a new cell wall is laid down between the daughter cells. In animal cells, the old cells will pinch off in the
middle along a cleavage furrow to form two new daughter cells.
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Telophase
Analysis Questions:
1. Why is
it more accurate to call mitosis "nuclear replication" rather than
"cellular division"?
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2. Explain why the
whitefish blastula and onion root tip are selected for study of mitosis.
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Exercise
3A.2: Time for Cell Replication
Procedure:
It is hard to imagine that
you can estimate how much time a cell spends in each phase of cell replication
from a slide of dead cells. Yet this is precisely what
you are going to do in this part of the lab. Since you
are working with a prepared slide, you cannot get any information about how
long it takes a cell to divide. What you can determine
is how many cells are in each phase. From this, you
can infer the percent of time each cell spends in each phase.
1. Observe every cell in one high
power field of view and determine which phase of the cell cycle it is in. This is best done in pairs. The
partner observing the slide calls out the phase of each cell while the other
partner records. Then switch so the recorder becomes
the observer and visa versa. Count at least two full
fields of view. If you have not counted 200 cells,
then count a third field of view.
2. Record your data in Table 3.1.
Table
3.1
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Number of Cells |
Percent of Total Cells Counted |
Time in Each Stage |
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Field 1 |
Field 2 |
Field 3 |
Total |
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Interphase |
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Prophase |
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Metaphase |
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Anaphase |
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Telophase |
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Total
Cells Counted |
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3. Calculate the percentage of
cells in each phase.
Consider it takes, on average, 24
hours (or 1,440 minutes) for onion root-tip cells to complete the cell cycle. You can calculate the amount of time spent in each phase
of the cell cycle from the percent of cells in that stage.
Percent of cells in stage
X 1,440 minutes = ___________ minutes of cell cycle spent in stage.
Questions:
1. If your observations had not been restricted to the area of the root tip
that is actively dividing, how would your results have been different?
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2. Based on the data in Table
3.1, what can you infer about the relative length of time an onion root-tip
cell spends in each stage of cell division?
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