Mitosis
Meiosis I
Meiosis II
Cancer
Checkpoints
Mitosis vs. Meiosis
Vocab
100

What is the first visible phase of mitosis when chromosomes begin to condense?

Prophase

100

What separates during Meiosis 1

Homologous chromosomes 

100

What separates in metaphase II?

Sister chromatids

100

What phase are most non-dividing cells in?

G0 phase

100

What is checked at the G1 checkpoint?

For the correct growing environment 

100

How many divisions occur in mitosis? In meiosis? 

One in mitosis; two in meiosis 

100

What is ploidy (n)?

The number of sets of chromosomes in a cell. 

200

During which phase do chromosomes line up along the center of the cell?

Metaphase

200

What process occurs during Prophase 1 that increases genetic diversity?

Crossing over 

200

How many cells result from Meiosis II?

Four haploid daughter cells 

200

What is the main cause of cancer at the cell cycle level?

Loss of cell cycle control (ignoring checkpoints) 

200

What happens if a cell fails the G1 checkpoint?

It exits the cycle and enters G0 or undergoes apoptosis.
200

How many daughter cells are produced in mitosis vs. meiosis?

Mitosis: two 

Meiosis: four 

200

What is binary fission?

Reproduction in prokaryotes where one cell splits into two identical cells. 

300

During which phase are sister chromatids pulled apart to opposite poles of the cell?

Anaphase

300

What happens during Metaphase 1 that increases genetic variation?

Independent assortment - homologous pairs line up randomly at the metaphase plate. 

300

Are the cells identical or different after meiosis II?

Genetically different 

300

What happens when cancer cells lose adhesion?

They can break away and spread (metastasis) 

300

What does the S checkpoint prevent?

Cells with damaged DNA from replicating further.

300

Whaat kind of cells does mitosis and meiosis produce?

Mitosis: identical somatic cells (2n) 

Meiosis: unique gametes (n) 

300

What are histones and what do they do?

Proteins that DNA wraps around to form chromatin; they help condense and organize DNA. 

400

What are the three stages of interphase, and what happens in each?

G1: Cell grows and carries out normal functions

S: DNA is replicated

G2: Organelles and proteins are prepared for mitosis

400

After Meiosis 1, how many cells are produced, and are they haploid or diploid?

Two haploid cells (each with duplicated chromosomes)

400

Why are the cells genetically different after meiosis II?

Because of crossing over and independent assortment in Meiosis I.

400

What is the name of the immortal human cancer cell line?

HeLa cells 

400

What is checked at the G2 checkpoint?

Proper DNA replication and cell growth.

400

How many times is DNA replicated in mitosis and meiosis?

Once - during the S phase before division begins

400

What does tetraploid (4n) mean?

A cell or organism with four complete sets of chromosomes 

500

Why is DNA replication not part of mitosis itself?

Because replication occurs during the S phase of interphase before mitosis begins. Mitosis only divides the already replicated DNA.

500

What is the main purpose of Meiosis 1?

To separate homologous chromosomes and reduce the chromosome number from diploid to halploid. 

500

If no crossing over occurred in Meiosis I, what would be true about the daughter cells after Meiosis II?

They would still be haploid but genetically identical to each other, since no genetic variation was introduced. 

500

What changes allow a tumor to become metastatic?

Loss of anchorage dependence, loss of density inhibition, and secretion of signals for blood vessel growth (angiogenesis). 

500

What does the M checkpoint ensure?

That all chromosomes are properly attached to spindle fibers before anaphase. 
500

If a diploid cell with 46 chromosomes undergoes mitosis and meiosis, how many chromosomes will each daughter cell have in each process?

Mitosis: 46 chromosomes (diploid, identical to parent)

Meiosis: 23 chromosomes (haploid, half the original number) 

500

What are gametes, and how do they differ from somatic cells in chromosome number?

Gametes are reproductive cells (sperm and egg) that are haploid (n). They have half the chromosome number of somatic cells (diploid, 2n).