A Brief Overview of Mitosis and Meiosis

In this unit, we learned about cell division and cell reproduction, mostly through the process of mitosis and meiosis. Mitosis occurs whenever more cells are need and can happen in animals during regeneration or during asexual reproduction. During mitosis, the cell is able to duplicate itself and make another cell that is exactly the same, including the same DNA, genes, everything. There are 6 different phases that occurs during mitosis in order for the cell to copy itself: interphase, prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase, and cytokinesis. In interphase, there are 2 different stages that happen; the G1 and S stages of interphase. In G1, that’s when the cell gets bigger and the cell starts to prep itself. Then directly after that, comes the S stage of interphase, which is when the chromosomes all make an exact copy of themselves (called sister chromatids). These sister chromatids have the exact same genes and structure. There’s another growth phase in interphase called G2 that happens, but it’s not as important. Then comes prophase, which is when the chromatin condenses and you’re actually able to see the chromosomes. In interphase, since the chromatin wasn’t very tightly packed together, you weren’t able to really see the chromosomes yet. It’s also between prophase and metaphase that the nuclear membrane disappears, which will come in handy during metaphase. So in metaphase, things called centrioles will move to the opposite ends of the cells and microtubules will come out from the centrioles and attach onto the centromeres of the chromosomes. This is able to happen because the nuclear membrane has dissolved, and the chromosomes, which were previously inside the nucleus, are now just in the cell and no longer protected by the nuclear membrane. The microtubules will eventually develop into spindle fibers. The spindle fibers tug from the opposite poles of the cell in order to get the chromosomes to line up directly down the middle of the cell. Now comes the anaphase part of mitosis. In anaphase, the chromosomes break at the centromeres, and the sister chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of the cell. In telophase, the nuclear membrane reforms around each group of one half of the sister chromatids on each side of the poles. The nucleoli will reappear and start to decondense back into chromatin. The last step is cytokinesis. In this phase, the cytoplasm should divide in 2, creating the 2 new daughter cells.

 

Meiosis is slightly different because instead of wanting to duplicate the cells, you want to create genetically different cells. The process is still similar to mitosis although you will end up with 4 daughter cells instead of 2. The beginning is roughly the same. It first starts with interphase, where the DNA duplicates itself. However, now we go into prophase 1, where homologous chromosomes pairs (maternal and paternal chromosomes with the same length and genes in the same place, however, there can be different alleles for each gene) come together so tightly that they might switch genes. The process keeps going, metaphase, anaphase, telophase…but instead of stopping there, then the process starts again with the 2 daughter cells at prophase 2, then goes into metaphase 2, anaphase 2, telophase 2 and this is what’s able to create the 4 daughter cells. In males, each of the 4 cells will become a sperm, however, in females, only one chosen cell will become the egg. This is important because if you remember in prophase 1, in meiosis, the homologous pairs are so tightly wrapped around each other that the genes sometimes swap. So when anaphase occurs and pulls these new sequence of genes to the different daughter cells, there’s a chance that one of the new sequence of genes in chromosomes that carries an undesirable disease has ended up in the one chosen egg.

 

This unit was interesting to learn about because we were able to discover a lot about ourselves and why our DNA came to be the way they are. It was also really cool to see how certain people come to have a mutation or inherited disease through looking at the DNA and their parents’ DNA. We mostly studied using the different directed reading worksheets that quizzed us on what we learned in class/the textbook but there were also a few informative videos we were able to watch that really helped us to understand what was happening in the 2 processes of cell reproduction. There have been current advances in genetic technology and scientists are currently working on a method that will allow them to be able to take a mutation in someone’s gene that causes them to have a disease and to cut out that specific gene out and replace it with a normal one. This is way more advanced than anything before because it’s actually stopping the root of the disease and not just giving the people drugs that will help combat the symptoms of the disease. The future of genetic modification is rapidly approaching with the help of advancements in technology and this will help people, especially ones with life altering diseases to live, not just survive.

News Article: The Mystery Of The Disappearing Rats

The Mystery of the Disappearing Rats

September 4, 2017
Paula Hsiao

On August 26, at around 8 pm Saturday, a rat was spotted running up the stairs before disappearing beneath the TV set and refrigerator. Witnesses at the scene say the rat was fairly small, compared to the other rats they’ve seen, but very quick. However, people at the scene during the incident say they could not find the rat after it’d ran under the TV, and that they are still searching.

According to the witnesses at the scene, they were just enjoying their dinner in front of the TV when the rat first appeared. One of the family members who first saw the ray way that the rat had been running up the stairs very fast when she’d seen it. That was supposedly when she screamed, which grabbed the attention of the others who were also there at the time. The screamed is said to have startled the rat, who ran underneath the television before any bystanders were able to catch it or hit it with a broom.

The family member who first say the rat says that “this is the 2nd time this has happened, so I think there must be a hole in the back door. There was another ray that had gotten in somehow a couple months ago and had run up the stairs the same way. So there must be a hole or something somewhere if they were able to climb up the same way.” The family is not too sure about where the rats were coming from though because they make sure to check that all their doors are closed every day.

“We waited so long for the rat to come out and we had even moved everything near the television away, but the TV set is right under the staircase so it’s a snug fit for humans. The rats have no trouble hiding there though,” claimed another family member at the scene. The rat was not able to be found despite their best efforts, so the family, who have said they’re going to set traps, says they have to take extra precautions with leaving doors open now.