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Molecular Genetics: Mitosis vs. Meiosis 440 Views
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Description:
In this video from our course on molecular genetics, learn about mitosis, meiosis and the difference between the two.
Transcript
- 00:00
[ whoosh ]
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:03
[ whoosh ]
- 00:05
Molecular Genetics
- 00:07
Mitosis versus Meiosis
Full Transcript
- 00:10
A la Shmoop
- 00:12
So we're here talking about DNA replication now
- 00:15
with Dr. Ruth Tennen, who is a guru on the subject.
- 00:17
So, Dr. Ruth, what are the two main types of cells
- 00:21
in the human body?
- 00:22
So there's two types.
- 00:24
One is the somatic cell.
- 00:26
So, those are kind of the regular cells that you think about.
- 00:28
So, your liver cells or your skin cells. Muscle cells.
- 00:32
The other type is germ cells, or sex cells.
- 00:35
And those are the cells that combine to form a new human. [egg and sperm combine to make a new human]
- 00:38
[ crowd oohs ]
- 00:39
Got it. So "somatic" - S-O-M-A-T-I-C.
- 00:43
Where does that -- what's "som"?
- 00:44
- It's not from "South and Market," right? - No.
- 00:46
It was done before that.
- 00:47
What is somatic?
- 00:49
So "soma" means body.
- 00:50
So it's basically body cells.
- 00:51
Got it.
- 00:53
Okay. So how do somatic cells relate with germ cells?
- 00:58
Are they sort of coopetition? Are they frenemies?
- 01:01
Are they just -- do they hate each other?
- 01:03
Do they live separately?
- 01:05
They're pretty happy together. They're in different parts --
- 01:06
So, basically, your whole body is composed of somatic cells
- 01:08
and then just sperm and egg cells.
- 01:09
Those are the only germ cells you have.
- 01:11
And the germ cells are what ultimately combine to form your body.
- 01:15
So they're required to form the somatic cells also.
- 01:17
And how does a germ cell -- cause, you know,
- 01:19
a normal person, you think "germ, ooh, that's bad.
- 01:21
I wanna not have any germs."
- 01:23
But, in fact, that would be bad, right?
- 01:25
Bad to not have germ cells, yeah.
- 01:27
It would be difficult to reproduce if you were a human.
- 01:28
Hmm. So we need the germs to reproduce?
- 01:32
- Right. - That just seems counterintuitive, but take it. There.
- 01:35
Okay, next. Five-dollar word - mitosis.
- 01:39
We touched on this a little bit earlier.
- 01:40
But give us a good definition for mitosis.
- 01:43
So, mitosis is the process of cell division that somatic cells undergo. [cells divide]
- 01:48
They take their duplicated DNA and they divide it into two new daughter cells.
- 01:51
[ ding! ]
- 01:52
Got it. So this is like the pants zipper thing
- 01:54
with the ATCG?
- 01:55
So, it's a little bit after that.
- 01:57
During -- if you think about the cell cycle,
- 01:59
which is basically how a cell goes from one to two cells,
- 02:01
it starts off by replicating its DNA.
- 02:04
And then at another point in the cycle is when the mitosis happens.
- 02:06
And mitosis is just basically the physical separation
- 02:08
of the DNA into two daughter cells.
- 02:11
Got it. Okay.
- 02:12
Then what's "meiosis"? M-E-I-O-S-I-S.
- 02:16
"Me-osis" or "my-osis" is basically the same idea as mitosis,
- 02:19
but it's for the germ cells, or the sex cells. [egg and sperm]
- 02:21
And it's a little bit different because meiosis starts with
- 02:25
- a normal cell that has two copies of every gene. - Mm-hmm.
- 02:28
And then there are two stages of meiosis -
- 02:30
one and two. And, ultimately, at the end, you end up,
- 02:32
rather than having two copies, just having one copy of each gene in the cell.
- 02:35
And that's what the egg and the sperm are.
- 02:36
One copy that can combine to ultimately form a diploid cell.
- 02:40
Got it. Fair enough.
- 02:42
Okay. Wow. DNA replication.
- 02:44
A la Dr. Ruth.
- 02:48
What are the two main types of cells in the human body?
- 02:52
What is mitosis?
- 02:54
What is meiosis?
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