Topic 2

Cell Division

Cell division is the process by which one parent cell divides to produce daughter cells. It underlies growth, tissue repair, and reproduction.

A. Mitosis

Mitosis Overview

  • Produces 2 genetically identical daughter cells — same chromosome number as parent
  • Daughter cells are diploid (2n) — in humans: 46 chromosomes each
  • Occurs in somatic (body) cells — skin, muscle, liver, bone marrow
  • Purpose: growth, tissue repair, and asexual reproduction
  • One division cycle — PMATC (Prophase → Metaphase → Anaphase → Telophase → Cytokinesis)
Mitosis Result 1 parent cell (2n) → 2 identical daughter cells (2n) No reduction in chromosome number. Genetically identical.

Phases of Mitosis — PMATC

PhaseKey Events
ProphaseChromosomes condense and become visible under microscope; nuclear envelope breaks down; spindle fibres begin to form from centrioles
MetaphaseChromosomes line up at the cell's equator (metaphase plate); spindle fibres attach to centromeres. Longest phase.
AnaphaseSister chromatids are pulled apart to opposite poles by spindle fibres shortening; cell elongates
TelophaseNuclear envelopes reform around each set of chromosomes at poles; chromosomes decondense; two nuclei form
CytokinesisCytoplasm divides — in animals: cleavage furrow; in plants: cell plate forms. Two daughter cells produced.
⚡ Mnemonic Please Make A Tasty Cake — Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase, Cytokinesis

B. Meiosis

Meiosis Overview

  • Produces 4 genetically different daughter cells — half the chromosome number
  • Daughter cells are haploid (n) — in humans: 23 chromosomes each (gametes)
  • Occurs in reproductive organs (gonads) — ovaries and testes
  • Purpose: formation of gametes (sperm and egg cells) for sexual reproduction
  • Two successive divisions: Meiosis I (separates homologous pairs) + Meiosis II (separates sister chromatids)
  • Crossing over occurs during Prophase I — homologous chromosomes exchange segments, creating genetic variation
Meiosis Result 1 parent cell (2n) → 4 unique daughter cells (n) Chromosome number halved. Each cell is genetically unique.
⚡ MCQ Tip Human body cells: 46 chromosomes (2n). After meiosis → gametes with 23 chromosomes (n). Fertilisation restores 46.

C. Mitosis vs Meiosis

Comparison Table

FeatureMitosisMeiosis
Daughter cells produced24
Chromosome numberDiploid (2n) — same as parentHaploid (n) — half of parent
Genetic variationNone — cells are identicalYes — crossing over creates variation
Number of divisionsOneTwo (Meiosis I + II)
Where it occursSomatic (body) cellsGonads (ovaries & testes)
PurposeGrowth, repair, asexual reproductionSexual reproduction (gamete formation)
Crossing overDoes not occurOccurs in Prophase I
Example (humans)Skin, liver, blood cellsSperm and egg cells

Quick MCQ Revision

FactAnswer
Mitosis produces2 identical diploid (2n) cells
Meiosis produces4 unique haploid (n) cells
Crossing over occurs inMeiosis I (Prophase I) — creates genetic variation
Mitosis phasesPMATC — Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase, Cytokinesis
Chromosomes align at equatorMetaphase
Sister chromatids pulled apartAnaphase
Human body cells46 chromosomes (23 pairs) — diploid
Human gametes23 chromosomes — haploid
Mitosis locationSomatic (body) cells — growth and repair
Meiosis locationGonads — ovaries and testes
Key