Types of Cell Division
Mitosis, Cell Cycle & Regulation
Genes & Mutations
Cancer Development
Cancer Treatments
100

What type of cell division do bacteria use?

Binary fission

100

In what phase does DNA replicate?

S phase of interphase.

100

What is a mutation?

A change in DNA sequence.

100

What is cancer?

Disease of unregulated cell division caused by mutations.

100

What cancer treatment physically removes the tumor?

Surgery.

200

What is produced during mitosis?

2 genetically identical diploid daughter cells

200

List the phases of mitosis in order.

Prophase → Metaphase → Anaphase → Telophase (PMAT).

200

What is a mutagen?

Anything that causes mutations (e.g., UV light, chemicals).

200

What is contact inhibition, and how is it different in cancer cells?

Normal cells stop dividing when crowded; cancer cells ignore this.

200

How does chemotherapy work?

Uses chemicals that kill rapidly dividing cells (cancer and healthy).

300

What is produced during meiosis?

4 genetically different haploid daughter cells.

300

What does the G1 checkpoint check for?

Cell size, nutrients, DNA damage, growth signals.

300

What is a proto-oncogene?

A gene that normally promotes healthy cell division.

300

What is anchorage dependence?

Normal cells need to be attached to tissue to divide; cancer cells do not.

300

How does radiation therapy kill cells?

Damages DNA so cells cannot divide.

400

What are the two main steps of binary fission?

DNA replication → dividing the cytoplasm.

400

What is apoptosis?

Programmed cell death.

400

What is an oncogene?

A mutated proto-oncogene that causes uncontrolled cell division (cancer).

400

What is angiogenesis?

Growth of new blood vessels to supply tumors.

400

What is targeted therapy?

Treatment that attacks specific cancer mutations without harming normal cells.

500

What organism reproduces using budding?

Yeast.

500

What does the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) ensure?

Chromosomes are properly attached before separating in anaphase.

500

What do BRCA1 and BRCA2 normally do?

Help repair DNA damage (tumor suppressors).

500

Why does cancer require multiple mutations?

It follows the multi-hit hypothesis—several damaged genes must accumulate.

500

What is immunotherapy?

Treatment that reactivates the immune system so it can kill cancer cells.