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Topic 2: The Cell Cycle. Overview. Cell cycle phases Review of DNA Replication Mitosis Cytokinesis Cell Cycle Regulation. Phases of the Cell Cycle. Key concepts Undergoes cell division only when asked to Makes sure cell division steps proceed with quality control
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Overview • Cell cycle phases • Review of DNA Replication • Mitosis • Cytokinesis • Cell Cycle Regulation
Phases of the Cell Cycle • Key concepts • Undergoes cell division only when asked to • Makes sure cell division steps proceed with quality control • Makes 2 daughter cells with exact same chromosomes and chromosome number
Four Phases of Cell Cycle • G1—interphase • S phase—synthesis phase • G2---continuum of interphase • M phase---mitosis
M phase • Mitosis • Division of DNA and cytoplasm into 2 daughter cells • 6 phases • Prophase • Prometaphase • Metaphase • Anaphase • Telophase • Cytokinesis
G1 phase • Cells growing but not dividing • DNA not replicated
S phase • DNA replication occurring • Centrosome is replicated
G2 phase • Cells are growing but not dividing • DNA is duplicated • Cell preparing for mitosis
Cell cycle length • Tissue culture • Generation time • S phase • Exposure to radioactive thymidine • G1—cells arrested in G1 are said to be in G0
Replication Licensing • Ensures that any given DNA replicates once and only once in a given S phase • Binding of minichromosome maintenance proteins (MCM) to replication origin in presence of origin recogntion complex (ORC) and helicase loaders • Once replication begins, MCM displaces and Cdkphosphorylates ORC and helicase loaders • Geminin blocks binding of MCM to DNA
Telomerase • present in germ cells, few other proliferating cells • In other cells, telomeres shorten with each cell division • Too short for capping proteins • apoptosis
Phases of Mitosis • Prophase • Prometaphase • Metaphase • Anaphase • Telophase • Cytokinesis
Prophase • Interphase MTs are replaced by astral MTs • Condensation of the chromosomes • Centrosomes to opposite sides of nucleus
Prometaphase • Fragmentation of nuclear envelope • Each chromatid has a kinetochore and attached to opposite spindle poles • Polymerization/depolymerization of MTs move chromosomes to metaphase plate
Metaphase • Chromosomes aligned at metaphase plate • All chromatids are attached to spindle MTs
Anaphase • Separation of sister chromatids • Chromatids pulled to opposite poles • Signal is activation of the anaphase promoting complex • Chromosomes are moved by MT shortening
Telophase • Chromosomes decondense • Reassembly of nuclear envelope • Contractile ring is assembled
Microtubules of Mitosis • Mitotic spindle • 3 classes of microtubules • Kinetochore MTs • Polar MTs • Astral MTs
Kinetochore MTs • Finds chromosomes and attaches to the kinetochore at the centromere • Moves chromosomes around the cell • Attached to kinesin-13 • Kinesin-13 attached at kinetochore • Encourages MT depolymerization
Polar MTs • Extend from MTOC to opposite pole • Overlaps in an anti-parallel manner • Causes cell to elongate • Kinesins drive apart MTs from opposite poles
Astral MTs • Extends from spindle to cell cortex • Anchors centrosome to cell
Cytokinesis • Cell cortex assembles into cytokinetic furrow • Ring of actin and myosin II that bisects the mitotic spindle • Myosin II walks along the actin filaments • Contractile ring constricted thru action of myosin and actin • Assembly/disassembly of actin-myosin complex regulated by Rho
Cell Division can be Asymmetrical • Usually symmetrical • Exception (examples) • Yeast • Frog embryos • Development of egg cells
Cell Cycle Regulation • Generation time variable in multi-cellular organisms • Rapidly dividing • Slowly dividing • Not dividing • Dividing when induced
TOR • Target of rapamycin • Central role in signalling network that controls cell size • Coordinates cell cycle progression • Activated in presence of nutrients and growth factors • Facilitates entry into S phase
Experimental Evidence for Cell Cycle Regulation • Heterokaryon Experiments • Xenopus Experiments • Yeast mutants
S. pombe studies • Mutant yeast • If small cells—too many divisions • Wee-1 • Encodes inhibitory kinase • Big yeast cells—not enough cell divisions • Cdc-25 • Activating phosphatase
Further Refinements • Isolation and purification of protein components • Maturation promoter factor • Consists of cyclin and cyclin-dependent kinase (CdK)
CDK and cyclins • CDK activated by cyclins • CDK levels remain constant throughout the cell cycle • Cyclins usually cycle • Different cyclins required at different phases of the cell cycle • Cyclins A and B contain destruction box; Cyclins C and D a PEST sequenceubiquitin-mediated cyclin proteolysis at the end of a cell cycle phase
Cyclin/Cdks • Cyclin—no enzyme activity • Bind to kinase to activate them • Cdk—catalytic subunit of the complex
Activation of Cdks • Cyclin necessary but not sufficient • Must get a specific set of phosphorylations
Cell Cycle Checkpoints • Transition from one phase to another in an orderly fashion • Key regulators are cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK) • Family of serine/threonine protein kinases
Checkpoint ControlRestriction Point • Passing thru restriction point commits cell to division • Senses availability of • Nutrients • Presence of growth factors • Cell size
DNA Damage Checkpoints • Check for DNA damage and provides time for repair • Occur before cell enters S phase (G1-S checkpoint) • After DNA replication (G2-M checkpoint)
G1-S checkpoint • Cell arrest is p53-dependent • DNA damage results in rapid increase in p53 levels