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Cell division
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Significance of mitosis
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Imogen Stevens
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Cards (10)
Mitosis
The process of nuclear division by which two
genetically identical daughter nuclei
are produced that are also
genetically identical
to the parent nucleus
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Significance of Mitosis
Enables
growth
of multicellular organisms
Enables
replacement
of cells and repair of tissues
Enables
asexual reproduction
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Mitosis
1. Produces
two
genetically
identical
daughter cells
2. Maintains the
same
number of
chromosomes
as the parent cell
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Mitosis in unicellular zygotes
Enables the zygote to grow into a
multicellular
organism
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Growth in
multicellular
organisms
May occur across the whole
body
or be confined to certain
regions
(e.g. meristems in plants)
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Cell death
Requires
continual
replacement by
genetically identical
cells (e.g. in skin and gut lining)
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Regeneration
in animals
Zebrafish
can regenerate
fins
Axolotls
can regenerate legs and
tail
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Asexual reproduction
Production of
new
individuals of a species by a single parent organism, where the offspring are genetically
identical
to the parent
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Asexual reproduction
in
unicellular
organisms
Cell division in
Amoeba
results in genetically
identical
offspring
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Asexual reproduction in multicellular organisms
New individuals grow from the parent organism and then
detach
(e.g. budding in Hydra and yeast, runners from
strawberries
)
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