40. Life and Death of the Cell Flashcards

1
Q

What are 3 methods of cell signalling?

A

Endocrine (distant target cell)
Autocrine (target on the same cell)
Paracrine (adjacent target cell)

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2
Q

What do mitogens do?

A

Stimulate cell division

Relieve intracellular controls that block cell cycle progress

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3
Q

What do growth factors do?

A

Stimulate cell growth
Promote synthesis of proteins
Inhibiting degradation

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4
Q

What do survival factors do?

A

Promote cell survival

Suppress apoptosis

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5
Q

What regulates transition through the cell cycle?

A

Cyclin-Cyclin dependent kinase complexes

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6
Q

What do G-1 cyclins do?

A

Help promote passage through the restriction point in late G1

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7
Q

What do G2/S cyclins do?

A

Bind CDKs at the end of G1 Commit the cell to DNA replication

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8
Q

What do S-cyclins do?

A

Bind CDKs during S phase

Required for the initiation of DNA replication

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9
Q

What do M-cyclins do?

A

Promote the events of mitosis

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10
Q

Levels of what in circulation control the cell cycle?

A
Cyclins fluctuate (control)
Levels of CDK are steady
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11
Q

What is p53?

A

Transcription factor/ tumour suppressor
Key regulator of cell proliferation
Mutations common in cancer

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12
Q

What is p53 activated by?

A

DNA damage

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13
Q

What is the p53 response to DNA damage?

A
  1. Induces p21
  2. p21 inhibits kinase activity of cyclin-CDK complex
  3. Rb is not phosphorylated, stays bound to E2F
  4. S-phase genes aren’t turned on
  5. If damaged not repaired p53 remains high
  6. Cell undergoes cell death
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14
Q

What are some characteristics of apoptosis?

A

Affects single cells
No inflammatory response
Non-random DNA fragmentation

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15
Q

How is apoptosis regulated by extrinsic signals?

A

Cells receive signals to commit suicide from other cells
Initiated by formation of death-inducing cell surface receptor signalling complex (DISC)
Leads to activation of caspase 8

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16
Q

How is apoptosis regulated by intrinsic signals?

A

Cell senses damage and initiates its own death
Mediated by changes in mitochondrial function
Regulated by anti-apoptotic Bcl2 family members
Activates caspase 9

17
Q

How are death receptors activated?

A
  1. Ligand binds
  2. Receptor trimerises
  3. Activation of pro-caspase 8
  4. Activates other caspases ultimately leading to apoptosis
18
Q

What antagonises the anti-apoptotic effect of Bcl2?

A

Cytoplasmic p53
Mitochondrial outer-membrane permeabilisation
Release of Cytochrome C into cytosol

19
Q

What happens why Cyt C leaks into the cytoplasm?

A

Binds to Apaf1
Binds to and activates caspase 9
These 3 things form the apoptosome
Apoptosome activates other caspases leading to apoptosis

20
Q

What do caspases do?

A

DNA fragmentation by endonuclease
Loss of cell shape
Organelle breakdown
Cell fragmentation into apoptotic bodies, phagocytosed by macrophages

21
Q

How can the intrinsic pathway be overridden by cancer cells?

A

p53 mutation

Overexpression of BCL2