biology - 1.5 Flashcards

1
Q

What does the cytoskeleton give?

A

Mechanical support and shape to cells.

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2
Q

What does the cytoskeleton consist of?

A

Different protein structures including microtubules, which are found in all eukaryotic cells.

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3
Q

What are microtubules?

A

Hollow cylinders composed of the protein tubulin.

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4
Q

Where do microtubules radiate from?

A

The microtubule organising centre (MTOC) or centrosome.

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5
Q

What do microtubules do?

A

They control the movement of membrane-bound organelles and chromosomes.

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6
Q

What does cell division require?

A

Remodelling of the cytoskeleton.

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7
Q

What does formation and breakdown of microtubules involve?

A

Polymerisation and depolymerisation of tubulin.

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8
Q

What do microtubules form?

A

The spindle fibres that are active during cell division.

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9
Q

What does the cell cycle consist of?

A

Interphase and mitotic (M) phase.

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10
Q

What does interphase involve?

A

Growth and DNA synthesis including G1, a growth phase; S phase, during which the DNA is replicated; and G2, a further growth phase.

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11
Q

What does mitotic phase involve?

A

Mitosis and cytokinesis.

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12
Q

In mitosis, how is the chromosomal material separated?

A

By the spindle microtubules.

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13
Q

What happens in cytokinesis, which follows mitosis?

A

The cytoplasm is separated into two daughter cells.

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14
Q

What does mitosis contain?

A

Prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase.

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15
Q

What happens in prophase?

A

DNA condenses into chromosomes each consisting of two sister chromatids.
Nuclear membrane breaks down; spindle microtubules extend from the MTOC by polymerisation and attach to chromosomes via their kinetochores in the centromere region.

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16
Q

What happens in metaphase?

A

Chromosomes are aligned at the metaphase plate (equator of the spindle).

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17
Q

What happens in anaphase?

A

As spindle microtubules shorten by depolymerisation, sister chromatids are separated, and the chromosomes are pulled to opposite poles.

18
Q

What happens in telophase?

A

The chromosomes decondense and nuclear membranes are formed around them.

19
Q

How is the progression through the cell cycle controlled?

A

By checkpoints.

20
Q

What are checkpoints?

A

Mechanisms within the cell that assess the condition of the cell during the cell cycle and halt progression to the next phase until certain requirements are met.

21
Q

What are involved in regulating the cell cycle?

A

Cyclin proteins that accumulate during cell growth.

22
Q

What do cyclins do?

A

They combine with and activate cyclin- dependent kinases (CDKs).

23
Q

What do active cyclin-CDK complexes phosphorylate?

A

Proteins that regulate progression through the cycle. If sufficient phosphorylation is reached, progression occurs.

24
Q

At the G1 checkpoint, what happens?

A

Retinoblastoma protein (Rb) acts as a tumour suppressor by inhibiting the transcription of genes that code for proteins needed for DNA replication.

25
Q

What does phosphorylation by G1 cyclin-CDK do?

A

Inhibits the retinoblastoma protein (Rb).

26
Q

What does inhibition of the retinoblastoma protein allow?

A

Transcription of the genes that code for proteins needed for DNA replication. Cells progress from G1 to S phase.

27
Q

At the G2 checkpoint, what is assessed?

A

The success of DNA replication and any damage to DNA.

28
Q

What does DNA damage trigger?

A

The activation of several proteins including p53.

29
Q

What can p53 do?

A

It can stimulate DNA repair, arrest the cell cycle or cause cell death.

30
Q

What does a metaphase checkpoint control?

A

Progression from metaphase to anaphase.

31
Q

At the metaphase checkpoint, what happens?

A

Progression is halted until the chromosomes are aligned correctly on the metaphase plate and attached to the spindle microtubules.

32
Q

What may an uncontrolled reduction in the rate of the cell cycle result in?

A

Degenerative disease.

33
Q

What may an uncontrolled increase in the rate of the cell cycle result in?

A

Tumour formation.

34
Q

What is a photo-oncogene?

A

A normal gene, usually involved in the control of cell growth or division, which can mutate to form a tumour-promoting oncogene.

35
Q

What is apoptosis triggered by?

A

Cell death signals that can be external or internal.

36
Q

What is an example of an external death signal?

A

The production of death signal molecules from lymphocytes.

37
Q

What is an example of an internal death signal?

A

DNA damage.

38
Q

What do external death signal molecules bind to?

A

A surface receptor protein and trigger a protein cascade within the cytoplasm.

39
Q

What does an internal death signal resulting from DNA damage cause?

A

Activation of p53 tumour-suppressor protein.

40
Q

What do both types of death signal result in?

A

The activation of caspases (types of protease enzyme) that cause the destruction of the cell.

41
Q

What does apoptosis do during the development of an organism?

A

It is essential as it removes cells which are no longer required as development progresses or during metamorphosis.

42
Q

When may cells initiate apoptosis?

A

In the absence of growth factors.