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The Cell Cycle

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Title: The Cell Cycle


1
The Cell Cycle
  • Elisabeth Bock
  • Protein Laboratory
  • Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology
  • http//www.plab.ku.dk/bock/index.htm
  • Link The Cell Cycle

2
Litterature
  • Chapter 4 Cellular Reproduction
    Multiplication by division in
    Inside the Cell, NIH
  • Chapter 16 The Cell Cycle
  • in Cooper Hausman The Cell

3
Overview of lectures
  • The cell cycle is divided into 4 phases
  • A control system regulates the progress through
    the cycle
  • The control system depends on cyclically
    activated protein kinases in the cell composed of
    a cyclin and a cyclin-dependent protein kinase
    (Cdk)
  • Extracellular factors are also required for
    growth, division and survival
  • Mitosis and cytokinesis
  • Meiosis

4
The cell doctrine
  • A cell arises from a previous cell which
    duplicates
  • its content and divides The cell cycle
  • How does a cell duplicate its content?
  • How does it partition the duplicated content and
    split it in two?
  • How are these processes regulated?

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The 4 phases of the cell cycle
7
The cell cycle control system
  • A central regulatory system coordinates the
    activities and thereby ensures correct
    progression
  • The system depends on cyclically activated
    protein kinases

8
Regulation of protein function
  • Protein function can be switched on and off by
    adding or removing phosphate groups to a protein
  • Kinases are enzymes that transfer a phosphate
    group from ATP to a sidechain of an aminoacid on
    a target protein
  • The phosphate group is removed by protein
    phosphatases

9
Cyclins and Cdks
  • Cell cycle regulating kinases are controlled by
    cyclins
  • Cyclins have no enzymatic activity
  • Cyclins have to bind to the kinases before the
    kinases can become active
  • The kinases are therefore called
    cyclin-dependent protein kinases or Cdks

10
Regulation of Cdk activity I
  • Cyclins are accumulated and destroyed during the
    cell cycle
  • Regulation of cyclin concentration controls Cdk
    activity
  • Cdk concentration does not change during the
    cycle

11
Cyclin degradation
  • Ubiquitin molecules are covalently attached to
    cyclin
  • Ubiquitinated-cyclin is targeted for proteasomes
  • Proteasomes are large proteolytic machines

12
Regulation of Cdk activity II
  • Not only cyclin concentration activates Cdk
  • Complex phosphorylations and dephosphory-lations
    of Cdk are also necessary

13
Different Cyclin-Cdk complexes regulate different
steps in the cycle
14
Each Cyclin-Cdk complex acts on different sets of
target proteins
15
Cell cycle arrest
  • If one step is delayed, a control system prevents
    activation of subsequent steps
  • The cell cycle can stop at specific checkpoints
  • If DNA is damaged, the cycle can be stopped in G1
    before S-phase

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p53 and cancer
  • P53 upregulation and phosphorylation allow DNA
    repair before replication
  • Missing or mutated p53 leads to increased
    proliferation with a high rate of mutations
  • In 50 of all cancers, mutations are found in the
    p53 gene

18
Cells can withdraw from the Cell Cycle
19
Dismantling the checkpoint system
  • Some cells dont divide, e.g. neurons and muscle
    cells
  • For a lifetime they persist in G0 phase
  • In G0, Cdks and cyclins disappear
  • Generally, mammalian cells only proliferate
    (divide), if they are stimulated by external
    factors
  • Mammalian cell cycle has various checkpoints

20
Extracellular cell cycle control
  • Organ and body size are controlled by
  • - cell growth
  • - cell division
  • - cell death/survival
  • Animal cells need extracellular signal for all
    these processes
  • Positively acting signals are
  • - mitogens
  • - growth factors
  • - survival factors

21
Mitogens
  • Mitogens are secreted proteins binding to
    surface receptors
  • These receptors activate signalling pathways that
    promote transition/release brakes between G1 and
    S phase
  • The Retinoblastoma protein, Rb, is such a brake
  • Rb is abundant in the nucleus, where it prevents
    transcription of genes necessary for
    proliferation

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23
Growth factors
  • GF stimulate cells to grow
  • Cell growth does not
    depend on the cell cycle control
    system

24
Cells have very different sizes
25
Survival factors
  • A cell needs signals not only for proliferation
    and growth, but also for survival
  • This means, that if a cell does not get survival
    factors, it will commit suicide
  • Survival factors are important both during
    development and in the adult organism

26
Extracellular factors inhibiting
growth
  • E.g. Myostatin inhibits growth and proliferation
    of myoblasts
  • Inactivation of myostatin leads to dramatic
    increase in muscle mass

27
Key concepts 1
  • The cell cycle consists of 4 phases G1, S, G2
    and M phase
  • A regulatory system consisting of cyclins and
    Cdks coordinates activities of the cycle
  • The cell cycle can be arrested at specific
    checkpoints
  • Cells can be withdrawn from the cycle and go into
    G0 phase
  • Extracellular factors (mitogens, growth factors
    and survival factors) regulate the cell cycle in
    animals

28
Mitosis and cytokinesis, M-phase
29
The M-phase
  • M-phase consists of mitosis
    and cytokinesis
  • Entry into M-phase is
    regulated by the M-phase
    Cdk /cyclin
  • Activation leads to a series
    of visible changes, e.g.
    breakdown of nuclear
    envelope, a radical
    reorganisation of the
    cytoskeleton etc.

30
Preparation for M-phase
  • Chromosomes duplicated in S-phase consist of 2
    copies tightly bound together as identical sister
    chomatides
  • After the start of M-phase, chromosomes condense
    to form visible thread-like structures
  • The cytoskeleton takes care both of the
    mechanical division of the nucleus (mitosis) and
    of the division of the cytoplasma (cytokinesis)

31
Cytoskeletal structures mediating M-phase
32
The centrosome, the microtubule-organizing center
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Sister-chromatides separate in anaphase
42
Cytokinesis
  • Cytokinesis is the process by which cytoplasm
    is cleaved in two by a contractile ring
  • The ring consists of actin and myosin

43
Cell shape during the cell cycle
44
Meiosis
  • Genes are carried by chromsomes
  • Chromosomes are portioned out into specialized
    sex cells called germ cells or gametes the egg
    and the sperm
  • The gametes are haploid, i.e. they have only one
    set of chromosomes

45
Sexual reproduction includes both diploid and
haploid cells
  • We have in all cells except the gametes, two
    sets of chromosomes, one from each parent the
    cells are diploid
  • Haploid cells are created by a process called
    meiosis. During meiosis the double chromosome set
    is partioned out, in fresh combinations, into a
    single chromosome set
  • A haploid cell cannot divide
  • Two different haploid gametes can fuse and make a
    new diploid cell called a zygote
  • The cells from which gametes develop are called a
    germ line

46
Sexual reproduction
47
Why sexual reproduction?
  • Good question! Chances of survival supposedly
    increase in an unpredictably changing environment
  • It makes the fittest individuals attempt to
    select good genes, allowing elimination of
    bad genes more rapidly than in a sexual
    reproduction

48
The meiotic process
  • Two key features- Haploid cells are produced
    by one DNA replication duplicating the
    chromosomes, followed by two successive cell
    divisions. The duration is days years!
  • - Meiosis involves a special process of
    chromosome pairing
  • Thus, meiosis produces 4 cells that are
    genetically different and contain half as many
    chromosomes as the original parent cell (meiosis
    produces 2 identical cells)

49
Chromosome pairing
  • A diploid cell contains 2 very similar versions
    of each chromosome
  • It has a great deal of duplicate genetic
    information
  • The two versions of each chromosome are, however,
    not identical, containing different variants of
    many genes
  • The alternative forms of a gene are called
    alleles
  • Because the parental forms of each chromosome are
    similar not identical they are called
    homologuos chromosomes or homologs

50
Division 1 in meiosis
  • Homologuous paternal and maternal chromosomes
    pair up alongside each other before they line up
    in the spindle
  • Pairing enables the paternal and the maternal
    homologs to be segregated to each cell

51
Recombination between maternal and paternal
chromosomes
  • After the duplicated chromosomes have paired,
    recombination (crossing-over) takes place i.e.
    parts of homologuous chromosomes are exchanged

52
Meiosis compaired to mitosis
53
Division 2 in meiosis
  • 4 haploid daughter cells are produced
  • The haploid cells contain extensively reassorted
    genetic information
  • Due to reassortment 223 8.4 x 106 different
    gametes can be produced
  • Together with recombinations due to
    crossing-over, a nearly limitless genetic
    variation can result

54
Key concepts 2
  • M-phase consists of mitosis and cytokinesis
  • Mitosis consists of - prophase
  • - prometaphase
  • - metaphase
  • - anaphase
  • - telophase
  • Chromosomes duplicated in S-phase consist of 2
    identical sister chromatides, which are
    segregated in anaphase

55
Key concepts 3
  • Meiosis results in 4 haploid cells that are
    genetically different and contain half as many
    chromosomes as the original parent cell
  • The haploid cells are produced by one DNA
    replication followed by two cell divisions
  • Recombination due to chromosomal cross-over
    results in nearly limitless genetic variation
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