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  • Hey, check this out.

  • Cool, huh?

  • I bet you wish you could do this have a clone clean up around the

  • apartment for you go to class, maybe take your Mom

  • to dinner on her birthday?

  • Well, you can't do that. And actually there are some really

  • good reasons why you can't do that.

  • We're going to talk about those in the next episode.

  • But, do you know what CAN clone themselves?

  • Your cells.

  • Like, almost every single one of them. And in fact

  • they're doing it right now!

  • For any creature bigger than a single-celled organism,

  • all of life stems from cells' ability to reproduce themselves,

  • because that's what allows organisms

  • to develop, grow, heal and keep from dying, for as long as possible.

  • This particular kind of cell division is called mitosis,

  • and it's responsible for a whole lot of your body's key functions.

  • If you get a cut, your body needs to make new cells. Mitosis.

  • Have too much to drink and damage your liver?

  • You gotta replace those cells. Mitosis.

  • Tumor growing in your spine? Unfortunately, again mitosis.

  • While you go from a seven pound baby to a seventy pound child it's not

  • your cells that are increasing in mass;

  • you're just getting more of them.

  • Over and over and over again.

  • That's mitosis.

  • This process is so central to your life that it will take place

  • in your body, over your lifetime, about 10 quadrillion times.

  • That's 10 thousand billion times!

  • Like all split ups, it's not easy. It's going to maybe be

  • a little bit messy, there's a lot of drama,

  • and it can take a surprisingly long amount of time.

  • But trust me, after we're done with it we'll all be better off.

  • So you are made of trillions of cells just like giraffes

  • and redwood trees.

  • And remember that inside each cell there's a nucleus that

  • stores your DNA, which contains all of the instructions

  • on how to build you.

  • That DNA is organized into chromosomes

  • and as we've mentioned before,

  • in your body cells, or somatic cells, you have 46 chromosomes

  • grouped into 23 pairs,

  • one in each pair is from your mom, and the other one's from your dad.

  • Cells with all 46 chromosomes are called diploid cells,

  • because they have 2 sets each. And that's what we're

  • focusing on today.

  • You also have haploid cells that have half as many chromosomes (23).

  • And those are your sex cells. They're produced in an equally

  • fantastic process called meiosis, which we'll be talking about

  • in the next episode.

  • But for now, the main thing to remember about mitosis is that

  • it allows one cell with 46 chromosomes to split into

  • two cells that are genetically identical,

  • each with 46 chromosomes. All in order to keep the

  • party of life going.

  • Now, the nucleus in your cell controls everything that

  • goes on in the cell.

  • It has all of the instructions necessary for making

  • the cell survive so you don't need to duplicate the whole cell.

  • All you need to do is duplicate the DNA, get it wrapped up,

  • and then if you have two separate pockets of DNA, that's all you need

  • to have two new cells.

  • Mitosis takes place in a series of discrete stages called

  • prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase.

  • And you can just say that over and over again,

  • and let it sink into your head.

  • And part of what's really amazing about this whole process is that,

  • while we know what these stages are, we don't always know the underlying

  • mechanisms that make all of them happen.

  • And this is part of science. Science isn't all the stuff we know,

  • it's how we're trying to figure all this stuff out.

  • Consider it job security if you want to be a biologist;

  • there is a lot of stuff that future biologists have to still figure out,

  • and this is one of them.

  • Alright, let's get our clone on.

  • So, most of their lives, cells hang out in this

  • limbo period called interphase, which means they're in between

  • episodes of mitosis, mostly growing and working and doing all the stuff

  • that makes them useful to us. During interphase, the long strings

  • of DNA are loosely coiled and messy, like that dust bunny of dog fur

  • and laundry lint under your bed.

  • That mess of DNA is called chromatin.

  • But as the mitosis process begins to gear up,

  • lots of things start happening in the cell

  • to get ready for the big division. One of the more important things

  • that happens is that this little

  • set of protein cylinders next to the nucleus, called the centrosome, duplicates itself.

  • duplicates itself.

  • We're going to have to move a lot of stuff around in the nucleus

  • and that's going to be regulated by these centrosomes.

  • The other thing that happens is all of the DNA begins

  • to replicate itself too,

  • giving the cell two copies of every strand of DNA.

  • To brush up on how DNA replicates itself like this,

  • check out this episode and then come on back.

  • Now the cell enters the first phase, or the prophase, when that mess of

  • chromatin condenses and coils up on itself

  • to produce thick strands of DNA

  • wrapped around proteins - those my friends, are your chromosomes.

  • Instead of dust bunnies, the DNA is starting to look

  • a little bit more like dreadlocks.

  • And the duplicates that have been made don't just float around freely;

  • they stay attached to the original, and together they look like little X's;

  • these are called the chromatids and one copy is the left leg

  • and arm of the X, and the other copy is the right leg and arm.

  • Where they meet in the middle is the centromere.

  • Just so you know, these X's are also called chromosomes

  • sometimes double chromosomes, or double-stranded chromosomes.

  • And when the chromatids separate, they're considered individual

  • chromosomes too.

  • Now, while the chromosomes are forming, the nuclear envelope

  • gets out of the way by completely disintegrating.

  • And the centrosomes then peel away from the nucleus, and start heading

  • to opposite ends of the cell. As they go, they leave behind

  • a wide trail of protein ropes called microtubules running from

  • one centrosome to the other.

  • You might recall from our anatomy of the animal cell

  • that microtubules help provide a kind of structure to the cell;

  • and this is exactly what they're doing here.

  • Now we reach the metaphase, which literally means "after phase"

  • and it's the longest phase of mitosis.;

  • It can take up to 20 minutes.

  • During the metaphase, the chromosomes attach

  • to those ropey microtubules right in the middle,

  • at their centromeres.

  • The chromosomes then begin to be moved around, and this seems to be

  • being done by molecules called motor proteins.

  • And while we don't know too much about how these motors work,

  • we do know, for instance, that there are two of them

  • on each side of the centromere.

  • These are called Centromere-associated protein E.

  • So, these motors proteins attach to the microtubule ropes and

  • basically serve to spool up the tubules' slack. At the same time,

  • another protein, dynein, is pulling up the slack from the other ends

  • of the ropes near the cell membranes. After being pulled in this

  • direction and that, the chromosomes line up, right down

  • the middle of the cell.

  • And that brings us to the latest installment of Bio-lography.

  • So how do those chromosomes line up like that? We know that

  • there are motor proteins involved but like, how?

  • What are they doing? Well, remember when I said earlier

  • that there are a lot of things that we don't totally understand

  • about mitosis? It's sort of weird that we don't, because we can

  • literally watch mitosis happening under microscopes, but chromosome

  • alignment is a good example of a small detail that has only

  • very recently been figured out, and it was a revelation

  • about 130 years in the making.

  • Mitosis was first observed by a German biologist by the name of

  • Walther Flemming, who in 1878 was studying the tissue of

  • salamander gills and fins when he saw cells' nuclei split in two

  • and migrate away from each other to form two new cells.

  • He called this process mitosis, after the Greek word for thread,

  • because of the messy jumble of chromatin, a term he also coined,

  • that he saw in the nuclei.

  • But Flemming didn't pick up on the implications of this discovery

  • for genetics, which was still a young discipline. And over the

  • next century, generations of scientists started piecing

  • together the mitosis puzzle, by determining the role of

  • microtubules, say, or identifying motor proteins.

  • Now, the most recent contribution to this research was made by a

  • postdoctoral student named Tomomi Kiyomitsu at MIT.

  • He watched the same process that Flemming watched, and figured out

  • how at least one of the motor proteins helps snap the

  • chromosomes into line.

  • He was studying a motor protein called dynein, which sits

  • on the inside of the membrane.

  • Think of the microtubles as tug-of-war ropes, with the

  • chromosomes as the flag in the middle.

  • What Kiyomitsu discovered was that dynein plays tug of war with itself.

  • Dynein grabs onto one end of the microtubules and pulls the tubules

  • and chromosomes toward one end of the cell.

  • When the ends of microtubules come too close to the

  • cell membrane, they release a chemical signal that punts

  • the dynein to the other side of the cell. There, it grabs

  • onto the other end of the microtubles and starts pulling,

  • until SMACK it gets punted back again.

  • All of this ensures that the chromosomes will line up

  • exactly in the middle, so that they will be split evenly.

  • That discovery was published in February 2012, a couple of weeks

  • before I sat in this chair, and 134 years after mitosis was

  • first observed.

  • If you want to join the ranks of scientists who are answering

  • the many questions left about mitosis, and lots of

  • other things about our lives maybe someday I'll do a

  • Bio-lography about you.

  • Now so far we've gone through the interphase, when the

  • centrosomes and DNA replicate themselves and get ready for

  • the split;

  • the prophase, when the chromosomes form and the centrosomes

  • start to spread apart;

  • and metaphase, where the chromosomes align in the

  • middle of the cell.

  • And now it's time to separate the chromosomes from their copies.

  • This time, motor proteins start pulling so hard on the ropes

  • that the X-shaped chromosomes split back into their individual,

  • single chromosomes. Once they're detached from each other, they're

  • dragged toward either end of the cell.

  • The prefix 'ana' means 'back' that may help you remember

  • the name of this phase, called anaphase.

  • After this, it's just a matter of using all of that genetic

  • material to rebuild, so that the copied genetic material has all

  • the accouterments of home.

  • In the last phase, telophase, each of the new cell's structures

  • are reconstructed.

  • First, the nuclear membrane re-forms, and nucleoli form within them.

  • And the chromosomes relax back into chromatin.

  • Then a little crease forms between the two new cells,

  • which marks the beginning of the final split. That division

  • between the two new cells is called cleavage.

  • All that's left is to make a clean break.

  • This is done by cytokinesis literally "cell movement"

  • by which the two new nuclei move apart from each other,

  • and the cells separate.

  • We now have two new cells, each with the full set of

  • 46 chromosomes.

  • These clones are called the daughter cells of

  • the original cell, and like identical twins they are

  • genetic copies of each other and also of their parent.

  • But, that's obviously not the case for you.

  • Even if you are an identical twin.

  • Shout-out to identical twins!

  • See me in the comments.

  • while you kind of are a clone of your sibling you are not

  • a clone of your parents.

  • Instead, half of your DNA in each of your cells is from your mom,

  • and half is from your dad.

  • To understand why that is, we have to understand how eggs

  • and sperm are formed. And that is meiosis, and that's what we're

  • going to be talking about next week on Crash Course.

  • Until then, you can just watch this video over and over again

  • or you can just watch the bits that you want to re-watch

  • using our table of contents, which is also available

  • in the description for people who are using iPhones

  • and can't click annotations

  • If you have any questions, you can reach us on Facebook

  • or on Twiiter or of course,

  • in the comments below.

Hey, check this out.

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