3.8 The cell cycle

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What are the three stages of the cell cycle?
Interphase, nuclear division and cytokinesis
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Describe interphase
Interphase occupies most of the cell cycle, it is the resting phase as no division takes place
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Describe nuclear divion
This is when the nucleus divides either into two (mitosis) or four (meiosis)
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Describe cytokinesis
This is the process by which the cytoplasm divides to form new cells
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What is the cause of cancer?
Damage to genes that regulate the cell cycle and mitosis which leads to uncontrolled growth and division of cells
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When does a tumour become cancerous?
When it changes from being benign to malignant
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Describe how a malignant tumour is different to a benign tumour
Malignant tumours grow more rapidly, are less compact and are more life-threatening
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Why do cells divide?
For growth and repair
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How does chemotherapy treat cancer?
It disrupts the cell cycle by preventing DNA from replicating adn inhibiting the metaphase stage of mitosis by interfering with spindle formation
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What is the problem with this treatment?
It affects normal cells as well as the cancerous ones
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Other cards in this set

Card 2

Front

Describe interphase

Back

Interphase occupies most of the cell cycle, it is the resting phase as no division takes place

Card 3

Front

Describe nuclear divion

Back

Preview of the front of card 3

Card 4

Front

Describe cytokinesis

Back

Preview of the front of card 4

Card 5

Front

What is the cause of cancer?

Back

Preview of the front of card 5
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