The part of the cell cycle where the organelles are synthesized.
What is G2 phase?
The purpose of Mitosis is to generate two
What is nuclei?
The reason cancer cells develop.
What are malfunctioning cell cycle checkpoints?
Stem cells can be found in an adult here as they become red and white blood cells.
What is the bone marrow?
The increasing cell reaching, and exceeding, the DNA capability of the cell causes this.
What is division(information crisis)?
The part of the cell cycle where the cytoplasm is divided forming 2 daughter cells.
What is cytokinesis?
The phase of Mitosis where the spindle disappears.
What is Telophase?
A cancer cell that attacks another cancer cell.
What is a hypertumor?
Nerve, muscle, and blood cells are all specific cells. These all arose from stem cells due the the activation of this.
What are genes?
When the volume of a cell increases faster than the surface area this decreases.
What is exchange of materials?
The function of S phase in the cell cycle.
What is DNA replication(copying)?
The phase of Mitosis where the chromosomes first appear.
What is prophase?
A cancer cell extracts these two things from an organism.
What are energy and nutrients?
A disease of adult humans resulting in memory loss that may be reversed due to stem cell therapy.
What is Alzheimer's disease?
The cuboidal cell of a human has a length of 1 cm on each side. The resulting surface area to volume would be
What is 6:1?
The parts of the cell cycle with checkpoints.
What are G1, G2, and M (metaphase) phases?
The phase of Mitosis where the sister chromatids migrate to the opposite ends of the cell.
What is anaphase?
Cancer cells break this form of inhibition when they grow into a tumor.
What is density dependent inhibition?
Stem cell therapy is controversial because they are harvested from these.
What is a human embryo?
Water and oxygen are needed along with this to help all cells generate energy.
What is Glucose?
The two major parts of the cell cycle.
What are Interphase and Cell Division?
When telomeres are exhausted due to excessive cell division and the cell does not die by programmed cell death this results
What is a senescent cell?
Cancer cells develop from exposure to radiation, chemicals, and toxins resulting in changes to the DNA. The name of this change is
What is a mutation?
Stem cells from the brain of this embryonic organism have been successfully planted in the adult resulting in increased function.
What is a mouse?
The two items that would "waste" from cellular reactions.
What are water and carbon dioxide?