Cell Cycle Flashcards

1
Q

Give five reasons as to why different cells divide at different rates

A
Embryonic vs. Adult
Complexity of system 
Necessity of renewal 
State of differentiation (some cells e.g neurons never divide)
Tumour cells
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2
Q

Why is it important to regulate cell division?

A

Abnormal mitosis results in:
cell death
mutations in oncogenes and tumour suppression genes
chromosomal instability (loose/gain whole chromosomes during cell division)
Deviation of protein levels of cell cycle regulators
Contact inhibition of growth
Attack machinery that regulates chromosome segregation

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3
Q

What is the cell cycle?

A

Orderly sequence of events in which a cell duplicates its contents and divides in two
simply: duplication, division + co-ordination

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4
Q

What occurs during the M-phase?

A

Nuclear division

Cytokinesis (cell division)

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5
Q

What occurs during interphase?

A

DNA + organelle replication

Protein synthesis

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6
Q

Why is mitosis the most vulnerable period of the cell cycle?

A

Cells are more likely to be killed (irradiation, heat shock, chemicals)
DNA damage cannot be repaired
Gene transcription silenced- no new proteins
Metabolism slows down

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7
Q

What happen during G0 phase?

A

Cell cycle machinery dismantled

Functions normally

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8
Q

What happens during G1 phase?

A

Decision point- is it able to replicate?

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9
Q

What happens during S phase?

A

Synthesis of DNA/Protein

Replication of all the organelles

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10
Q

What happens during G2 phase?

A

Another decision point

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11
Q

What do the centrosomes do?

A

Consists of two centrioles, barrels of nine triplet microtubules
Microtubules organising centre
Duplicate before entering S phase

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12
Q

What are the 6 phases of Mitosis?

A
Prophase
Prometaphase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase
Cytokinesis
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13
Q

What happens during prophase I?

A

Condensation of chromatin

Strong and packed so the chromosomes can move without too much damage

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14
Q

What is a condensed chromosome made up of?

A

2 sister chromatids each with a kinetochore

Attached by centromere

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15
Q

What happens during prophase II?

A

Duplicated centrosomes migrate to opposite sides of the nucleus and organise the assembly of spindle microtubules
Mitotic spindle from outside nucleus between the 2 centrosomes

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16
Q

What is the spindle?

A

Radial microtubule arrays from around each centrosome
They grow until they meet in the centre
Polar microtubules form

17
Q

What happens during prometaphase I?

A

Chromosome aligned at equator of the spindle Breakdown of nuclear envelope
Spindle formation largely complete
Attachment of chromosomes to spindle via kinetochores

18
Q

What happens during prometaphase II?

A

Microtubule from opposite pole is captured by sister kinetochore
Chromosomes attached to each pole conger to the middle
Chromosomes slides rapidly towards centre along microtubules

19
Q

What happens during Anaphase A?

A

Cohesin, which holds sister chromatids together, breaks down
Microtubules shorten
Daughter chromosomes pulled towards opposite poles

20
Q

What happens during Anaphase B?

A

Daughter chromosomes migrate towards poles

Spindle poles migrate apart

21
Q

What happens during telophase?

A

Daughter chromosome arrive at spindle
Nuclear envelope reassembles
Assembly of contractile ring that separates the two cells

22
Q

What happens during cytokinesis?

A

Ring contracts
Midbody (remnants from microtubules that coordinated migration of chromosomes) begins to form
Cells divide

23
Q

What happens during the transition out of metaphase?

A

Spindle assembly checkpoint
Make sure all chromatids are bound to a microtubules
And that the microtubules are from different poles

24
Q

How does the cell communicate that the checks have been completed?

A

Each sister chromatid needs to signal

Proteins (CENP-E and BUB protein kinases) dissociate from kinetochore when chromosomes are properly attached.

25
Q

How may aneuploidy occur?

A

Mis-attachment of microtubules to kinetochores

Aberrant centrosome/DNA replication (multiple rounds of replication)

26
Q

What happens of the cell is not big enough or their is DNA damage?

A
  1. Cell cycle arrest
    - at check points (G1 and spindle check point)
    - can be temporary (following DNA repair)
  2. Programmes apoptosis
    - DNA damage too great cannot be repaired
    - Chromosomal abnormalities
    - Toxic agents
27
Q

How can tumour cells avoid check points?

A

Growth factors at G1 checkpoint induces hyper proliferation
May block G2 checkpoint, mitosis started when cell is not ready
Block Metaphase checkpoint

28
Q

How else may tumours deregulate cells?

A

Block exit from cell cycle into G0 phase

Cells repeat cycle immediately

29
Q

What triggers a cell to enter the cell cycle and divide?

A

Growth factors

30
Q

What happens during a signalling cascade?

A

Réponse to extracellular factors
Signal amplification
Signal integration
Modulation by other pathways

31
Q

What happens during protein kinase cascades?

A

Sequence of phosphorylation and activation of subsequent kinases
Signal reversed by phosphotases
Leads to amplification, diversification and opportunity fro regulation

32
Q

What dis c-Myc protein do?

A

Transcription factor
Peaks when growth factors are present
It is an oncogene- over expressed in many tumour cells

33
Q

What are cyclin-dependent kinases?

A

Present in proliferating cells throughout cycle
Activity regulated by interaction of cyclins and phophorylation
4 types: 1,2,4+6

34
Q

What do cyclins do?

A

4 types: A,B,D+E
Transiently expressed at specific points in cell cycle
Regulated at level of expression
Synthesised then degraded