L1 Cell Cycle Flashcards

1
Q

A mixture of signals has to be integrated by the cell to make the decision to proliferate, be quiescent of differentiate

A

Existence of a master governor that makes major decision regarding cell fate = cell cycle clock, which operates in the nucleus

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2
Q

Cell cycle clock

A

Network of interacting proteins that receives signals from outside and inside the cell, integrates them and decides the cell’s fate

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3
Q

Proliferation

A

Proliferation -> cell cycle of growth and division

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4
Q

Quiescence

A

Quiescence -> non-proliferative state imposed on the cell

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5
Q

Interphase - G1 phase

A
  • Cell increases in size
  • Ribosomes, RNA produced
  • Preparation for DNA synthesis
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6
Q

Interphase - S phase

A
  • DNA synthesised (chromosome duplicated)
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7
Q

Interphase - G2 phase

A
  • Cell checks fidelity of DNA

- Preparation for nuclear division

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8
Q

MITOSIS: cell division

A

Sub-phases: - prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase
- cytokinesis

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9
Q

Remember you have 2 major control factors

A

The normal control by different cyclins – this drives the cycle forward

Mechanisms to stop the cycle (and correct) if there are problems ie Checkpoints

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10
Q

R = restriction point

A

– Beyond this you no longer need eternal signals to drive the cell cycle

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11
Q

Pairing of cyclins with CDKs G1:

A

CDK4 and CDK6 depend on the association with cyclin Ds (D1,D2 &D3 = D-type cyclins)

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12
Q

Pairing of cyclins with CDKs

After the R point:

A

E-type cyclins associate with CDK2 -> phosphorylation of substrates required for entry in S phase

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13
Q

Pairing of cyclins with CDKs

S phase:

A

: A-type cyclins replace E cyclins in complex with CDK2 -> S phase progression. Later in S-phase, A-type cyclins associate with CDC2 (also called CDK1)

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14
Q

Pairing of cyclins with CDKs

G2:

A

B-type cyclins replace A-type ones in the complex with CDC2

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15
Q

Pairing of cyclins with CDKs

M phase:

A

B-type cyclins/CDK1(CDC2) -> mitosis triggering

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16
Q

Pairing of cyclins with CDKs

G0 to G1:

A

Mediated by cyclin C/CDK3 complex

17
Q

Cyclin levels fluctuate during the cell cycle

Cyclin E:

A

Low levels throughout most of G1, rapid increase after the R point

18
Q

Cyclin levels fluctuate during the cell cycle

Cyclin A:

A

Levels increase in concert with the entrance in S phase

19
Q

Cyclin levels fluctuate during the cell cycle

Cyclin B:

A

Levels increase in anticipation of mitosis

20
Q

Cyclin levels fluctuate during the cell cycle

A

Collapse of cyclin levels as the cell progresses through the cell cycle -> degradation (ubiquitination-dependent)
The cell cycle can only progress in one direction

21
Q

Exception: D-type cyclins

A

D-type cyclins (D1 is the most studied) are controlled by extracellular signals: growth factors + integrin-mediated ECM attachment
Removal of GFs -> rapid collapse of cyclin D1 levels
D-type cyclins convey messages from the extracellular environment to the cell cycle clock in the nucleus
synthesised in the cytoplasm & transported in the nucleus

22
Q

Control of cyclin levels during the cell cycle

A
  • D-type cyclins -> extracellular signals
  • Other cyclins -> intracellular signals & coordinated with cell cycle advance
    cyclin/CDKs activate complexes of the subsequent phase & inhibit those active in the previous phase
23
Q

Cyclin/CDKs are regulated by CDK inhibitors (CKIs)

A

CKI = CDK inhibitors -> 7 proteins antagonising the activity of cyclin/CDKs

24
Q

Cell Cycle Checkpoints

G2 Checkpoint:

A

Is all DNA replicated?
Is cell big enough?
Is environment favourable?

25
Q

Cell Cycle Checkpoints

Metaphase Checkpoint:

A

Are all chromosomes aligned on spindle?

26
Q

Cell Cycle Checkpoints

G1 Checkpoint:

A

Is cell big enough?
Is environment favourable?
DNA damage?

27
Q

G1/S restriction point progression

A
  • Cyclin D has a high turnover its levels can only be maintained under continuous mitogen signalling
  • As levels of CyclinD/CDK4 are maintained -> Rb is phosphorylated (actually HYPO phosphorylated).
  • This allows some E2F transcription. E2F causes CyclinE/CDK2 to accumulate and this HYPER phosphorylates Rb to fully release E2F transcription and enter S-phase
28
Q

There are 3 places where DNA damage is detected and acted upon to STOP the cell cycle

A

(i) G1
(ii) Entry to S-phase
(iii) Entry into mitosis

29
Q

What happens if the DNA gets damaged?

A

+ check for chromosome non-disjunction
G1 repair = non-homologous end joining
G2 repair = homologous recombination

30
Q

DNA Damage

A
  • ATM/ATR get activated and associate with the site of DNA damage
  • ATM/ATR will activate other kinases to block the cell cycle
  • p53 is stabilised and turns on p21, (p21 is a CKI)
31
Q

DNA Damage response in G1

A
  • p21 renders the G1/S-CDK and S-CDK complexes INACTIVE. Thus preventing cycle progression
  • DNA is then repaired
32
Q

What happens if repair is not possible?

A
  • Apoptosis
33
Q

G1: growth v/s quiescence decision

A

Discrete window to consult the extracellular environment: from the onset of G1 phase to an hour or 2 before the G1-to-S transition.

34
Q

G1 decision making machinery apparent in the responses of cultured cells to extracellular signals:

A
  • Serum and growth factors removed before the cells have completed 80-90% of G1 -> fail to proceed further and revert to G0 state
  • Serum and growth factors removed in the final hr of G1 -> proceed to S, G2 and M phase
  • Restriction point (R point)
35
Q

S-phase: The cell’s problems

A
  • It has to copy very large arrays of DNA ie chromosomes and repackage the DNA for the next G1 phase
  • S-phase is the central event where DNA is replicated.
    Two problems
  • The DNA has to be replicated accurately to prevent mutations
  • The DNA must only be copied ONCE
36
Q

G1

A
  • INACTIVE Helicases are loaded onto replication origins, forming a PreRC (pre-replication complex)
  • This is called licensing
37
Q

S

A

DNA is unwound.

DNA is replicated (forks move away from each other)

38
Q

M

A

M-CDK trigger chromosome segregation

39
Q

If the forks stall you can also get a DNA damage response.

A
  • This can occur, for example when nucleotides are depleted in a cell.
  • This response prevents cells segregating partially replicated chromosomes
    [ You can also get DNA repair in S-phase where a mistake is detected and the DNA around it is resected and filled back in ]