Multiple fusion: daughter cells different from parent cell?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the interpretation of cellular processes, particularly focusing on multiple fission and its implications for genetic similarity between daughter and parent cells. The initial assertion is that daughter cells resulting from multiple fission are genetically identical to the parent cell, which is confirmed through references to mitosis and schizogony. The conversation highlights that in multiple fission, cytokinesis occurs, leading to the formation of genetically identical daughter cells. However, it also raises questions about the physical size of these daughter cells compared to the parent cell. The role of malaria in this context is discussed, emphasizing its life cycle stages and the impact on human health, particularly the destruction of liver and red blood cells. The clarification that the diagram referenced does not depict fusion but rather mitosis without cytokinesis is crucial, as it distinguishes between different cellular processes. Overall, the focus remains on understanding the genetic and physical characteristics of cells resulting from these reproductive processes.
gracy
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I think in Multiple fusion daughter cells are different from parent cell.I interpreted this by looking at the image below
multiple.jpg

Have I interpreted correctly?Is this image reliable?
 
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This process is is called schizogony: mitotic division in which multiple rounds of nuclear divisions occur before the cytoplasm segments. So the resulting cells are all genetically the same.

The only time you have sexual reprduction (and therefore changes in genes) is in the gut of the malaria mosquito (Anopheles falciparum).
This picture helps a lot
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0b/Plasmodium_lifecycle_PHIL_3405_lores.jpg

Look at the diagram.
Step 1 happens only when the mosquito injects sporozoites. This starts cycle A in your diagram. A only happens after a mosquito bite.
... -> step 4 is what you are talking about: where the schizont makes genetic duplicates of itself.
Step 4 starts another cycle - labelled B. This is the cycle that is the cause of the cyclic nature of malaria. Short periods of violent illness with an interlude of several days - or maybe weeks.

So malaria kills some liver cells, but repeatedly kills off red blood cells. Marlaria is an extreme problem for millions of people on almost every continent.
Malaria deaths in 2013 were ~580,000 with about 198 million infections: http://www.who.int/features/factfiles/malaria/en/
 
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jim mcnamara said:
Look at the diagram.
Step 1 happens only when the mosquito injects sporozoites. This starts cycle A in your diagram. A only happens after a mosquito bite.
... -> step 4 is what you are talking about: where the schizont makes genetic duplicates of itself.
Step 4 starts another cycle - labelled B. This is the cycle that is the cause of the cyclic nature of malaria. Short periods of violent illness with an interlude of several days - or maybe weeks.
But this does not really answer my question.Please help.
 
What really is your question - the cells are identical after multiple fusion? They are identical genetically.
 
First, there is no fusion going on in the diagram you're showing. The cells containing multiple nuclei result from mitosis without cytokinesis, not from two cells fusing together. Just as in normal mitosis, this process results in identical nuclei but instead of being segregated into different daughter cells, the two identical nuclei remain in the same cell. The process can repeat to create a cell with many identical nuclei. Here's a section from Molecular Biology of the Cell discussing this phenomenon, with a very nice picture of these multinucleate cells during mitosis: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK26831/#_A3392_

Multinucleated cells can arise from many cells fusing together (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syncytium), but this is not the process shown in the diagram.
 
Sorry I meant Multiple fission in the title .
Ygggdrasil said:
The cells containing multiple nuclei result from mitosis without cytokinesis,
And in multiple fission cytokinesis does occur.Right?
 
Multiple fission is a type of asexual reproduction.So,I think daughter cells would be same as mother cell(cell which gives rise to those daughter cells)genetically,.But what about size?
 
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