Significance of Mitosis
- Mitosis is the process of nuclear division by which two genetically identical daughter nuclei are produced that are also genetically identical to the parent nucleus
- The process of mitosis is of great biological significance and is fundamental to many biological processes:
Growth of multicellular organisms
- The two daughter cells produced are genetically identical to one another (clones) and have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell
- This enables unicellular zygotes (as the zygote divides by mitosis) to grow into multicellular organisms
- Growth may occur across the whole body of the organism or be confined to certain regions, such as in the meristems (growing points) of plants
Replacement of cells & repair of tissues
- Damaged tissues can be repaired by mitosis followed by cell division
- As cells are constantly dying they need to be continually replaced by genetically identical cells
- In humans, for example, cell replacement occurs particularly rapidly in the skin and the lining of the gut
- Some animals can regenerate body parts, for example, zebrafish can regenerate fins and axolotls regenerate legs and their tail amongst other parts
Asexual reproduction
- Asexual reproduction is the production of new individuals of a species by a single parent organism – the offspring are genetically identical to the parent
- For unicellular organisms such as Amoeba, cell division results in the reproduction of a genetically identical offspring
- For multicellular organisms, new individuals grow from the parent organism (by cell division) and then detach (‘bud off’) from the parent in different ways
- This type of reproduction can be observed in different plant, fungi and animal species
- Some examples of these are budding in Hydra and yeast and runners from strawberries