Cell replication Flashcards

1
Q

When are cells in G0 (quiescent phase)?

A

In absence of stimulus, cells go into G0

or

differentiated cells (neurones, hepatocytes)

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2
Q

What causes cells to leave G0?

A

In response to growth factors ( extracellular factors )

Signal amplification

Signal integration/modulation from other pathways

Ras/Raf/MEK/ERK

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3
Q

Examples of signalling proteins? (If these are mutated cancer risk increases)

A

Ras/Raf/MEK/ERK

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4
Q

How does a cell transition from G0 to G1?

A

growth factor stimulate c-Myc - a transcription factor

acts as a oncogene

c- Myc : growth factor signalling pathways induces expression of c-Myc. stimulates expression of cell cycle

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5
Q

What are Cyclin-dependent Kinases?

A

They are found inactive in proliferative cells.

Become activated when a cyclin binds

They phosphorylate molecules to activate or inactivate a protein

molecule examples : serine / threonine / tyrosine

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6
Q

Why can Serine, Threonine and Tyrosine be phosphorylated?

A

Due to their hydroxyl groups

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7
Q

What causes production and degradation, the levels of cyclins or the levels of CDKs?

A

Levels of cyclin as they fluctuate.

CDKs are always present in same concentration

Only the cyclin : Cdk complex is active during mitosis

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8
Q

What CDK does cell cycle entry require?

A

C-Myc promotes CDK4/6 - Cyclin D complex

Allows progression to S phase

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9
Q

Why are protein Kinase Cascades useful?

A

Kinases can be regulated by other kinases and this can cause both signal amplification/diversification of pathways or an opportunity for regulation

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10
Q

What causes a CDK-Cyclin complex to go from inactive to active?

A

The CDK has inhibitory phosphates and activating phosphates both bound to it

An activating protein phosphatase needs to remove the inhibitory phosphate

a cyclin will join a CDK but the complex is inactive

an activating protein phosphatase will remove the inhibitory phosphate on the CDK

activate + positive feedback

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11
Q

How are Cyclins removed from the CDK-Cyclin complex?

A

Ubiquitylation of cyclin ( signal on Cyclin that represents destroy me)

leaving a inactive CDK

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12
Q

How do CDKs-Clyclins regulate expression of the next complex?

an example?

A

Once active they stimulate synthesis of genes required for next phase.

e.g.
( G1 ) Cdk4/6-cyclin D leads to
( S ) Cdk2-cyclin E leads to 
(G ) Cdk2-cylin A leads to 
( mitosis ) Cdk1-cyclin B
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13
Q

How is cell growth carried out?

A

Intracellular signalling pathways which drive proteins synthesis increase levels of proteins and since protein degradation is inhibited there is a net increase in protein.

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14
Q

How does Retinoblastoma protein act as a brake on cell proliferation?

A

isolates transcription factor in an inactive form so cannot turn on genes needed for cell cycle progression

Tumors seen in eyes in childhood if the Rb protein is MISSING as there is a lack of a tumour supprssor

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15
Q

How does the Rb brake become released?

A

Phosphorylation of Rb by G1-Cdk / G1/S-Cdk complexes

Inactivates Rb releasing transcription factor, allowing translation and cell proliferation

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16
Q

What is E2F and why is it important?

A

It is a transcription factor

Allows cell cycle progression once Rb is inactivated. Allows Cyclin E to bind to Cdk2 for S phase to begin

17
Q

What if there are cells with damaged DNA in G1?

What does inactive p53 do?

A

p53 recognises the break in the DNA and protein kinases are activated.

These phosphorylate p53 activating it.

18
Q

What does active p53 do?

A

In presence of DNA damage it binds to regulatory region of p21 gene. transcribing p21 mRNA = p21 protein

19
Q

What does the p21 family do?

A

Inhibits Cyclin-Cdk complexes by binding to it

20
Q

What examples of overexpression can cause cancer?

A
Regulatory proteins e.g. 
Ras
Cyclin D1
C-Myc
EGFR/HER2
21
Q

What examples of loss of expression can cause cancer?

A

Regulatory proteins such as suppressors
Rb ( lung cancers )
p53 ( all human cancers, need mutation of both copies of the gene)

22
Q

Extra missed info?

A

Cell cycle : duplication , division, co-ordination

  • interphase : G1 + S + G2
  • Cell cycle checkpoints (5) : external environment must have nutrients and growth factors,

G1 checkpoint : is enironment favourable = enter S phase

G2 checkpoint : is dna replicated, is dna damage repaired = enter mitosis

Mitosis checkpoint : are chromosomes properly attached to mitotic spindle = pull apart chromosomes

If repair cannot work undergo apoptosis

Growth factor ( mitogen signalling ) - for cell doubling in size