Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1
Toxic Plastic ■ 103

Good Cells Gone Bad


Cell division is not always a good thing. Runaway
cell division can create a tumor (see “Cancer:
Uncontrolled Cell Division” on page 101). In a
developing organism, it can also cause an organ
such as the heart or liver to form incorrectly
and not function properly. It is little wonder,
then, that the cell cycle is carefully controlled
in healthy individuals. The decision to divide a
cell is made during the G 1 phase of the cell cycle
in response to internal and external signals.
In humans, external signals that influence the
commitment to divide include hormones and
proteins called growth factors. Some hormones
and growth factors act like the gas pedal in a car
and push a cell toward cell division; others act
like a brake and prevent cell division.
After a cell enters the cell cycle, special cell
cycle regulatory proteins are activated. These
proteins “throw the switch” that enables the
cell to pass through critical checkpoints and
proceed from one phase of the cell cycle to the

the equal and symmetrical partitioning of the


replicated genetic material. Normally, no daugh-


ter cell winds up short a chromosome, nor does it


acquire duplicates. Unless an error occurs, each


daughter cell inherits the same genetic informa-


tion that the parent cell possessed in the G 1 phase


of its life.


After the replicated DNA has been divided


in two, half to each end of the parent cell, the


cytoplasm is divided by a process called cytoki-


nesis (“cell movement”), like pulling apart a ball


of Silly Putty into two halves. Cytokinesis gives


rise to two self-contained daughter cells that are


clones of each other.


Mitotic division can serve both the eukaryotic


organism’s need to replace itself (to reproduce)


and its need to add new cells to its body. Many


multicellular eukaryotes use mitotic division to


reproduce asexually, including seaweeds, fungi,


and plants, and some animals, such as sponges


and flatworms. All multicellular organisms also


rely on mitotic division for the growth of tissues


and organs and the body as a whole, and for


repairing injured tissue and replacing worn-out


cells. Mitosis is why children grow taller and


why skin closes over a cut.


Overlapping with the end of
mitosis, the cell physically
divides into two daughter
cells through cytokinesis.

The new chromosomes reach
the poles. The nuclear envelopes
re-form, and the chromatin
decondenses.

The sister chromatids are
separated and become individual
chromosomes. These new
chromosomes are moved toward
the poles of the cell by the
shortening of the mitotic spindle.

New chromosomes

Chromosomes
decondensing

Nuclear
envelope
forming

Anaphase Telophase

Mitosis Cytokinesis

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