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extension questions 28. for each phase, describe at least one way mista…

Question

extension questions

  1. for each phase, describe at least one way mistakes during the cell cycle could result in problems.
g₁
g₂
m
g₀
  1. some types of cancers are treated with radiation, similar to ultraviolet light. why might it be beneficial to irradiate cancer cells?

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
For Question 28:
  • G₁: This phase involves cell growth and checkpoint checks for damage. A mistake here means damaged cells proceed to divide.
  • S: This phase is for DNA replication. Errors here create mutated DNA in daughter cells.
  • G₂: This phase checks replicated DNA for damage. A mistake lets damaged DNA enter mitosis.
  • M: This phase is mitosis/division. Errors here cause unequal chromosome distribution.
  • G₀: This is a resting phase. A mistake here makes non-dividing cells re-enter the cycle abnormally.
For Question 29:

Cancer cells divide rapidly, spending more time in DNA synthesis/mitosis phases. Radiation damages DNA; cancer cells struggle to repair this damage, triggering cell death, while healthy, slower-dividing cells can repair damage more effectively.

Answer:

Question 28:
PhaseProblem from Mistake
SMutated DNA sequences are passed to daughter cells, leading to genetic abnormalities or dysfunctional cells.
G₂Cells with unrepaired DNA damage enter mitosis, resulting in daughter cells with broken or incomplete chromosomes.
MChromosomes fail to separate evenly (nondisjunction), creating aneuploid cells with abnormal chromosome counts (e.g., Down syndrome from failed M phase separation).
G₀Terminally differentiated cells (e.g., nerve cells) re-enter the cell cycle inappropriately, leading to abnormal cell growth and potential tumor formation.
Question 29:

Radiation damages the DNA of rapidly dividing cancer cells. Unlike healthy cells (which divide slowly and have efficient DNA repair mechanisms), cancer cells often have impaired DNA repair pathways, so the damage leads to cell cycle arrest or programmed cell death (apoptosis), reducing the number of cancerous cells.