Cell reproduction is
asexual. For most of the constituents of the cell, growth is a steady, continuous process, interrupted only briefly at
M phase when the nucleus and then the cell divide in two. The process of cell division, called
cell cycle, has four major parts called phases. The first part, called G1 phase is marked by synthesis of various
enzymes that are required for DNA replication. The second part of the cell cycle is the S phase, where
DNA replication produces two identical sets of
chromosomes. The third part is the G2 phase in which a significant
protein synthesis occurs, mainly involving the production of
microtubules that are required during the process of division, called
mitosis. The fourth phase, M phase, consists of nuclear division (
karyokinesis) and cytoplasmic division (
cytokinesis), accompanied by the formation of a new
cell membrane. This is the physical division of mother and daughter cells. The M phase has been broken down into several distinct phases, sequentially known as
prophase,
prometaphase,
metaphase,
anaphase and
telophase leading to cytokinesis. Cell division is more complex in
eukaryotes than in other organisms.
Prokaryotic cells such as
bacterial cells reproduce by
binary fission, a process that includes DNA replication, chromosome segregation, and cytokinesis. Eukaryotic cell division either involves
mitosis or a more complex process called
meiosis. Mitosis and meiosis are sometimes called the two
nuclear division processes. Binary fission is similar to eukaryote cell reproduction that involves mitosis. Both lead to the production of two daughter cells with the same number of chromosomes as the parental cell. Meiosis is used for a special cell reproduction process of
diploid organisms. It produces four special daughter cells (
gametes) which have half the normal cellular amount of DNA. A
male and a
female gamete can then combine to produce a
zygote, a cell which again has the normal amount of chromosomes. The rest of this article is a comparison of the main features of the three types of cell reproduction that either involve binary fission, mitosis, or meiosis. The diagram below depicts the similarities and differences of these three types of cell reproduction.
Comparison of the three types of cell division The DNA content of a cell is duplicated at the start of the cell reproduction process. Prior to
DNA replication, the DNA content of a cell can be represented as the amount Z (the cell has Z chromosomes). After the DNA replication process, the amount of DNA in the cell is 2Z (multiplication: 2 x Z = 2Z). During Binary fission and mitosis the duplicated DNA content of the reproducing parental cell is separated into two equal halves that are destined to end up in the two daughter cells. The final part of the cell reproduction process is
cell division, when daughter cells physically split apart from a parental cell. During meiosis, there are two cell division steps that together produce the four daughter cells. After the completion of binary fission or cell reproduction involving mitosis, each daughter cell has the same amount of DNA (Z) as what the parental cell had before it replicated its DNA. These two types of cell reproduction produced two daughter cells that have the same number of chromosomes as the parental cell. Chromosomes duplicate prior to cell division when forming new skin cells for reproduction. After meiotic cell reproduction the four daughter cells have half the number of chromosomes that the parental cell originally had. This is the
haploid amount of DNA, often symbolized as N. Meiosis is used by
diploid organisms to produce haploid gametes. In a diploid organism such as the human organism, most cells of the body have the diploid amount of DNA, 2N. Using this notation for counting chromosomes we say that human
somatic cells have
46 chromosomes (2N = 46) while human
sperm and
eggs have 23 chromosomes (N = 23). Humans have 23 distinct types of chromosomes, the 22
autosomes and the special category of
sex chromosomes. There are two distinct sex chromosomes, the X chromosome and the Y chromosome. A diploid human cell has 23 chromosomes from that person's father and 23 from the mother. That is, your body has two copies of human chromosome number 2, one from each of your parents. Immediately after DNA replication a human cell will have 46 "double chromosomes". In each double chromosome there are two copies of that chromosome's DNA molecule. During mitosis the double chromosomes are split to produce 92 "single chromosomes", half of which go into each daughter cell. During meiosis, there are two chromosome separation steps which assure that each of the four daughter cells gets one copy of each of the 23 types of chromosome.
Sexual reproduction Though cell reproduction that uses mitosis can reproduce eukaryotic cells, eukaryotes bother with the more complicated process of meiosis because
sexual reproduction such as meiosis confers a
selective advantage. Notice that when meiosis starts, the two copies of sister chromatids number 2 are adjacent to each other. During this time, there can be
genetic recombination events. Information from the chromosome 2 DNA gained from one parent (red) will transfer over to the chromosome 2 DNA molecule that was received from the other parent (green). Notice that in mitosis the two copies of chromosome number 2 do not interact.
Recombination of genetic information between homologous chromosomes during
meiosis is a process for
repairing DNA damages. This process can also produce new combinations of genes, some of which may be adaptively beneficial and influence the course of evolution. However, in organisms with more than one set of chromosomes at the main life cycle stage, sex may also provide an advantage because, under random mating, it produces
homozygotes and
heterozygotes according to the
Hardy–Weinberg ratio. == Disorders ==