Peer Responses BIOL 304 6380
Student’s Name
Institution
Course
Lecturer’s Name
Date
Peer Responses
Response to JESSE
Hello Jesse. It was nice seeing you stay on top of your work. You have adequately addressed every question as per the discussion requirement. In response to the first question, I can see that you have started by defining mitosis, then going ahead to explain how errors in this process can contribute to the development of cancer. You have also mentioned how this is different from the case of meiosis (Jamasbi et al., 2022). However, I would like to point out that you could have provided in-text citations to provide evidence for your claim. The same case goes for all the other responses to questions in part 1. For the second part of the paper, the National Cancer Institute resource was already provided, of which I can confirm that all the responses provided are based on this single source of evidence (National Cancer Institute, 2020). Thank you for your post.
References
Jamasbi, E., Hamelian, M., Hossain, M. A., & Varmira, K. (2022). The cell cycle, cancer development, and therapy. Molecular Biology Reports, 1-9.
National Cancer Institute. (2020, September 25). Cancer Statistics. National Cancer Institute; Cancer.gov.
Response to Dominic
Hello Dominic. I really enjoyed going through your work, with well-constructed sentences free from spelling or grammar mistakes. I can see that you have comprehensively addressed every question as required. I gained additional insight regarding the contribution of mitosis errors in the development of cancer (Levine & Holland, 2018). However, your discussion lacks in-text citations, which is crucial in supporting your claims, especially for the first part of the paper. For the second part, it was not necessary to utilize the CDC as a source, as the assignment required the use of the National Cancer Institute resource instead (National Cancer Institute, 2020). However, the findings are still similar. I look forward to gaining knowledge from your work in the future.
References
Levine, M. S., & Holland, A. J. (2018). The impact of mitotic errors on cell proliferation and tumorigenesis. Genes & development, 32(9-10), 620-638. .
National Cancer Institute. (2020, September 25). Cancer Statistics. National Cancer Institute; Cancer.gov.