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The Cell Cycle. Chapter 12. Cell division - process cells reproduce; necessary to living things. Cell division due to cell cycle ( life of cell from origin in division of parent cell until own division into 2) Unicellular organisms - results in many new members.
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The Cell Cycle Chapter 12
Cell division - process cells reproduce; necessary to living things. • Cell division due to cell cycle (life of cell from origin in division of parent cell until own division into 2) • Unicellular organisms - results in many new members.
Multicellular organisms - division helps in development of organism and repair and renew preexisting cells • Requires distribution of identical genetic material (DNA) to 2 daughter cells.
Genome - cell’s genetic information packaged as DNA. • DNA molecules packaged into chromosomes. • Body cells - somatic cells; sex cells - gametes. • DNA has proteins – maintains structure; helps control gene activity.
Duplicated chromosome - 2sister chromatids (identical copies of chromosome’s DNA) • Region where strands connect shrinks to narrow area (centromere)
Processes continue every day to replace dead and damaged cells. • Produce clones - cells with same genetic information.
http://www.s8int.com/images2/cloned.jpg Cloned cells
Mitotic (M) phase of cell cycle alternates with much longer interphase. • M phase includes mitosis, cytokinesis. • Interphase - 90% of cell cycle.
Interphase - cell grows by producing proteins and cytoplasmic organelles, copies chromosomes, prepares for cell division; 3 subphases. • 1G1 phase (“first gap”) - growth. • 2S phase (“synthesis”) -chromosomes copied. • 3G2 phase (“second gap”) - cell completes preparations for cell division.
Mitosis – 5 subphases. • End interphase - centrosomes duplicated, begin to organize microtubules into aster (“star”).
1Prophase - chromosomes tightly coiled, with sister chromatids joined together. • Nucleoli disappear; mitotic spindle forms, appears to push centrosomes away toward opposite ends (poles) of cell.
2Prometaphase - nuclear envelope fragments and microtubules from spindle interact with chromosomes. • Microtubules from 1 pole attach to 1 of 2 kinetochores (special regions of centromere), microtubules from other pole attach to other kinetochore.
3Metaphase - spindle fibers push sister chromatids until all arranged at metaphase plate (imaginary plane equidistant between poles)
4Anaphase - centromeres divide, separating sister chromatids. • Each pulled toward pole to which it is attached by spindle fibers. • 2 poles have equivalent collections of chromosomes.
5Telophase - cell elongates; free spindle fibers from each centrosome push off each other. • 2 nuclei form, surrounded by fragments of parent’s nuclear envelope. • Cytokinesis (division of cytoplasm) begins.
Animals - cytokinesis (cleavage) - appearance of cleavage furrow in cell surface near old metaphase plate. • Cytoplasmic side of cleavage furrow contractile ring of actin microfilaments and motor protein myosin form. • Contraction of ring pinches cell in 2.
Plants, cytokinesis - cell plate between dividing cells. • Plate enlarges until membranes fuse with plasma membrane at perimeter; contents vesicles forming new wall material in between.
Bacteria • Prokaryotes - binary fission. • DNA of bacteria coiled, highly packed. • Binary fission - chromosome replication begins at 1 point in circular chromosome, (origin of replication). • Copied regions move to opposite ends of cell.
As chromosome replicates and copied regions move to opposite ends of cell, bacterium grows until it reaches 2x original size. • Cell division involves inward growth of plasma membrane, dividing parent cell into 2 daughter cells with complete genome.
Regulation of cell cycle • Some cells divide frequently in life (skin cells), others can divide (reserve - liver cells) mature nerve, muscle cells do not divide at all. • Some control over when cells divide/how often they divide in lifetime.
Cycle driven by specific chemical signals in cytoplasm. • Events of cell cycle directed by cell cycle control system. • Checkpoint in cell cycle is critical control point where stop/go signals regulate cycle. • 3 major checkpoints found in G1, G2, and M phases.
G1 checkpoint (most important), cell either get go ahead to finish cycle and divide, or receive stop signal. • If stop signal - goes into G0 phase (remains in limbo waiting to start). • Most human cells in this mode.
Proteins, kinases, can activate/deactivate other proteins. • Kinases always present in cell; need cyclins (protein) to activate. • Complex of kinases and cyclin - cyclin-dependent kinases (Cdks).
MPF (“maturation-promoting factor”) triggers cell’s passage past G2 checkpoint to M phase. • G1 checkpoint regulated by at least 3 Cdk proteins and several cyclins.
http://www.uic.edu/classes/bios/bios100/summer2002/cdk02.gif