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Cell Cycle - Cell Biology

What is the cell cycle

A reproductive cycle of a cell where the cell is able to duplicate its chromosomes and usally the other cell components before dividing to make 2 daughter cells

What takes place in the S phase of the cell cycle

In the S phase where the chromosomes are duplicated by DNA replication where chromosome number stays the same but each chromosome has 2 chromatids so double the genetic material, that can be dividied equally

What is Chromatin

How DNA is held in eukaroyotic cells in a complex of histones and non-histone proteins + nuclear DNA. It allows for DNA compaction and involvbed in DNA activity regulation

What are nuceosomes

The basic structural monomeric unit of chromatin

What are histone octamers made from

They are formed from the dimers H3 H4 H2A H2B, and there are 2 copies of each dimer so get an overal total of 8 dimers to make the histone octamer

What are the 2 functiuonal domains in the core histone

Amino terminal tail and the histone fold
The histone fold can intercat with each other allowing the formation of dimers via handshake intercation

What are nucleosomes made of

They are made of nuclear DNA + histones

What are the linker histones

They bind both the DNA and the nucleosome core, and so can change the path of DNA that exit the nucleosome.
This means it effects the linker DNA accesibility and so then this may chnage the chromatin compaction and organisation

What is the zig-zag model

The structure of the 30nm chromatin fibres that is amde from the folding of 11nm chromatin fibres. It is thought that the nuleosomes are able to connect to the nucleosome that is opposite it, to form a helix like structure.

What are SMC proteins

They are able to form cohesins and condesisn proteins

What are cohesins and condensins needed for

Cohesins are needed during interphase and condensins are needed during mitosis, and they work by forming a dimer with another SMC protein

What is the structure of the SMC protein dimers

Both dimers contain 2 SMC protein but they also need the additon of a non SMC protein otherwise the dimer is unfunctional.
They are both able to form a ring around the nucleosome

How does cohesin work during interphase

Loop domains in the DNA are created by the additon of cohesin to the interphase chromosome due to cohesin binding. Then undergo ATP hydrolysis and the bound CTFC complex will prevent any further looping taking place. This leads to loops of interphase chromosomes with cohesin biund to it

How to visualise the chromosomes

Use multi-coloured FISH to visualise both intrerphase and mitotic chromosomes
They take uo very specifc places in the nucleus called chromosomal territories and is unique for each chromosome, that is able to regularly interact with the nucleus

What is interphase chromatin

Eukaroyic chromatin DNA us wrapped around histone octamers called nucleosomes
During interphase the fibres are arranged in loops controlled by cohesin and CTFC that define loop boundaries

Looping chromatin fibres has a function in chromatin compaction and gene expression

Geneome organisation overall does depend on the organsim tyoe

What is the mitotic chromosome structure

There is a centromere 1 per chromosome with then 2 chromatids bound to it- 2 DNA molecule per chromatid
The end of the chromatid called the telomere

How do you fold uo DNA to mitotic chromosomes

There is a short region of DNA, that have chromatin made up of nucleosomes like beads on a string
There is no cohesin but there is condensin 2, that is able to fold the chromatin into loops and then load that onto the DNA.

Condensin 1 then further fold by adding loops within the loops, to help condense the DNA into metaphase chromosome

What are mitotic chromosomes

Interphase chromatin and mitotic chromosomes are organised differentially.
During mitotic chromosome assembly interphase loops disappear completely, and DNA is folded into linear array of continuous chromatin loops attached to a scaffold. This array is compressed to form a mitotic chromosome.

Different classes of proteins participate in the mitotic chromosome assembly, but condensins seems to be the most important.

Condensins establish loops, but these loops are different from the chromatin loops that are found in interphase.

COHESIN plays a very important role in the organisation of interphase genome, CONDENSIN plays equally important role during mitosis

What is Interphase

The period between the end of 1 M phase and beginning of the next one

What is G1

Cell cycle gap between M phase and S phase

What is G2

Cell cycle gap between S phase and the M Phase

What is the S phase

Cell cycle stage during which the DNA replication takes place and chromosone duplication takes place

What is M phase

Where mitosis and cytokinesis takes place

What is mitosis

nuclear division, the process in early M phase by which the duplicated chromosomes are segregated by the mitotic spindle and packaged into daughter nuclei

What is cytokinesis

cell division, the process in late M phase by which the duplicated nuclei and cytoplasmic components are distributed into daughter cells by division of the mother cell

What is chromatin

Complex of DNA, histones, and non-histone proteins found in the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell

What is a histone

a group of small abundant proteins, rich in basic amino acids, that combine to form the nucleosome cores around which DNA is wrapped in eukaryotic chromosomes

What is a nucleosome

beadlike structure in eukaryotic chromatin, composed of a short length of DNA wrapped around an octameric core of histone proteins; the fundamental structural unit of chromatin

What are the stages of the cell cycle

M phase is where the mitosis and cytokinesis and interphase all take place, so DNA replication happen here as well
G1 and 2 stages are when there is a loss of signalling cells and cell decides if the cells is going to enter the cell cycle or not, so uave many molecular pathways to decide

What is cell cycle control

Is a control system of molecular pathways that regulate the timing and coordination of cell cycle events that govern the progression through the cycle

What are cell cycle checkpoints

Stop the cycle at 3 different stages if somehting goes wrong and work like a binary switch so once complete are irreversable

What is the start checkpoint

In the mid to late G1 phase and can't be progressed path if the cell growth is insufficiant, DNa damage ir incomplete preperations
Enter a long non-dividing state if condtions are not met

What is the G2/M checkpoint

Transition into the M phase is regulated and can be stopped due to DNA damage or incompletion of DNA replication

What is the metapahase to anaphase checkpoint

Transition checkpoint in M phase where the initiation of a sister chromatid can be blocked, this is due to chromosomes not being properly attached to microtubules in the mitotic spindles

What is the cell cycle control system dependent on

It is relinant on cyclically activated cyclin dependen protein kinases
When cyclin form complex with Cyclin dependent Kinase the protein kinase is activated to trigger cell cycle events amd without the cyclin the CDK is inactive and so no cell cycle event

How does CDK and cyclin regulate cell cycle progression

Due to a constant concentration of CDK the level of cyclin fluctuates and always more CDK than cyclin so all the CDK is active at once

What are the 4 types of cyclin

G1 cyclins
G1/S cyclins

S cyclins

M cyclins

How does phosphorylation of proteins drive transition in the cell cycle

In G1 have the phosphorylation of G1/CDK substrate
To enter the S phase have phosphorylation of S-CDK complex

To enter M phase have phosphorylation of M-CDK complex

And to enter anaphase have to destrcution of APC/C substrate

How do cyclins trigger different cell cycle events

Different cyclins bind to different CDK
The cyc;oin protein wont only activate the CDK but also the direct target specific proteins so each Cyclin-CDK complex will phosphorylate a different protein set

The same complex may also induce different effect at different times in cell cycle

What are CDK-activating Kinases

They regulate the whole cyclin CDK complex
Good to increase or decrease rate of reaction for the complex dependent on the cell environment in cell cycle

What is the Wee-1CDC25 regulatory pathway

Wee1/Myt1 be used to inhibit the cyclin CDK complex by further phosphorylation at 1 or 2 sites of the active site to make the complex inactive, but5 the CDC25 can dephosphorylate the sites to then reactivate the cyclin CDK complex

What does G1 cyclin do

Stimulate entry into a new cell cycle, and concentration depend on cell growth rate or on the growth promoting sequences being signalled

What do G1/S cyclins do

Stimulate the progression ofr the start so the commitment to the cell cycle entry, peak conc at end of G1

What do S cyclins do

They are necassary for DNA synthesis and contribute to control of early mitotic events

M cyclins what do they do

Necassary for full entry into mitosis and peak conc in metaphase of mitosis

What are CDK inhibitor proteins

CKI binding cause a large conformationla change in the CDK active site so make it inactive, helps to govern the G1/S and S CDK complexes

What is regulated proteolysis

The ubiquitin pathway is one of several ways to degrade proteins in a controlled manner, due to ubiqutin is attached to a lysine of a protein targetred for degradation. This produce a polyubiquitin chain

What is the proteasome in proteolysis

Large protein complex with proteolytic activity for degrading proteins marked by polyubiquitn chains added to them on the lysine

How does a proteasome work

Proteasome cap with a polyubiqitin receptor, recgonise the ployubiqutin chain and move the target protein to the proteasome core where they are digested after the ubiqutin removed by ubiquitin hydrolase and ATPases unfold the protein as it enters

How does proteolysis help to regulate cell cycle

Due to regulate the M stage by activating the APC/C that then degrade the M cyclin so then no entry to mitosis and especially the metaphase to telophase checkpoint

What happens during prophase

The replicated chromosomes will then condense in the nucleus and outside the nucleus the mitotic spindles will start to develop between the 2 centrosomes that replicated and moved apart

What happnes in prometaphase

This starts as soon as the nuclear envelope breakdown
The chromosomes attach to the spindle microtubules via the kinetochores in the chromosome and they undergo active movemenent in the cytoplasm

What happens during metaphase

Chromosomes align on the equator of the spindle fibres on the metaphase plate
The kinetochores spindles attach to the sister chromatdis to the opposte pole of the spindles

The kinetochroes loctaed in the chromosome centromere

What are Kintochores and how ard they assembled

Asembled during early mitoisis on centromeres and they are used for the attachment of microtubules

What is the centromere

The part of the chromosome where the primary construction is made of DNA which allows chromatid segragation during mitosis

How do kinetochores attach to microtubules

Via 20-30 microtubule attached to the kinetochore to connect the mitotic spindle and the chromosome

What is cohesion of sister chromatids

Established immediatly after DNA synthesis by a protein complex called cohesin and DNA catenation
Cohesin can do this due to hold the sister chromatids together until anaphase at the centromeres

It is removed in anaphase due to activity of the Spindle assembly checkpoint mechanism

How does the spindle assembly checkpoint work

It will detect incorrect attachemnt at the kinetochores
The cell is then arrested in metaphase

This then give more time to correct the improper

attachements

When there is then proper attachement the APC/C is acti9vated and the cell can enter anaphase

How to silence SAC and APC activation

APC remain inactive until all the Kintochores are attached properly to the microtubules due to SAC
After the attachment the ubiquitinates securin after the securin destructes and releases and so activates to seperate the cohesin from the centromere

What takes place during Anapahse

Sister chromatids seperate tor form 2 daughter chromosomes and each is pulled away by spindles to opposite poles of the cell
Pulled by the contraction of the kintechore microtubules

This leads to chromosome segragationn

What takes place during telophase

Chromosomes arrived at the poles of the cell and decondense
New nuclear envelope envelopes around both the poles of the cell

Central spindles is formed and the divison of the cytoplams started by the contrcatile ring

What takes place during cytokinesis

Cytoplasm is dividied into 2 by the contractile ring of actin and myosin and leads to the formation of 2 identicla daughter cells

What is mitotic spindle assmebly

Microtubules have polarity, due to the - end depolarises and + end will rapidly polymerise

What is a cancer cell

It is an abnormal cell type that is able to rapidly divide and uncontrollably in an autonomous process
It can lead to the formation of tumour cells that happens after repeated round of mutation and division that then lead to clone of cell that form a tumour that can be malignant or benign

How is cell divison, growth and cell survival is regulated

By intraceullular and extraceullular signal molecules are able to regulate this

What are mitogens

These are extracellular factors that stimulate cell division that is triggered by G1/s - CDK activity

What are growth factors

Are able to stimulate cell growth by promoting synthesis of new proteins and macromolecules

Survival factors

These promote the cell survivla by surpressing the form of programmed cell death called apoptosis

How do mutations of these lead to cancer

Mutations in the receptor on the cell membrane
Mutations cause the active area of the receptor so the receptor then always signalling so no longer responsive to outside areas

May be overexpression due to too many receptors so then gbetb too large a signal so excessive activity

What is an oncogene

A gene that the protein synthesized will promote cancer due to mutation in the gene and are a dominant gene

What is a protoncogene

Resust in an over sythesized protein that generally regualte the cell cyle and are too active so too much cell division

What is a tumour surpressor gene

Code for a protein that restrain cell proliferation such that the loss of the gene lead to greater chance of cancer formation

What is genetic and chromosome instability

An abnormal increase of defect in the chromosomes number of structure along with increase in the rate of defects in the genes

What is Meiosis

Nuclear divison that leasd to the fortmation of 4 haploid cells that are all gametes and gentically different to each other

What is a bivalent

Structure formed from 2 closely aligned duplicated homologous chromosomes thar are then joined together by a synaptonemal complex

How do synapotomial complex work

They hold bivlant together by rod shaped transverse filaments that hold them together and the axial core each homolog intercat with the cohesin in complexes thatbhold sister chromatids together

What is a Chiasmata

When there is a crossover between 2 sections of non sister chromatids and lead to genetic variation

What happens in meiosis 1

The homologous chromosomes are segragated and so sister chromatids are held together and this lead to 2 diploid cells with 2 chromatids each
There is DNA replication before hand

What takes place in meiosis 2

The sister chromatids are then segragated and lead to 4 genetically different haploid cells
There is no DNA replocation

What is the differnce of meiosis vs Mitosis

In meiosis 1 homologous seperate rather than sister chromatids
Both sister kinetochores in a homolgue must attach stably to the same spindle pole and the chiasamta hold homologous together allowing bi-orientation at the equator

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