Title: Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle
1Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle
2Cell division functions in reproduction, growth,
and repair.
- Cell Division - the reproduction of cells
- Cell Cycle - the life of a cell from its origin
in the division of a parent cell until its own
division into two - Cell division enables unicellular organisms to
divide themselves, forming two separate
organisms, and also enables sexually reproducing
organisms to develop from a single cell- the
fertilized egg, or zygote. After an organism is
fully grown, cell division continues to function
in renewal and repair.
3Cell division distributes identical sets of
chromosomes to daughter cells
- A cells endowment of DNA is called its genome.
Before a cell can divide, all of this DNA must be
copied and then separated so that each daughter
cell ends up with a complete genome. - During the replication and distribution of DNA,
the DNA molecules are packed into chromosomes.
Each eukaryotic species has a characteristic
number of chromosomes in each nucleus. - Somatic cells all body cells except the
reproductive cells - Gametes sperm and egg cells
4Chromosomes are duplicated and distributed in
Mitosis, which is the division of the cells
nucleus
- In each eukaryotic chromosome there is a long,
linear DNA molecule representing hundreds of
thousands of genes. The DNA is associated with
various proteins that maintain the structure of
the chromosome and help control the activity of
genes. This DNA-protein complex, called
chromatin, condenses after a cell duplicates its
DNA in preparation for division. This allows us
to see the chromosomes with a light microscope.
5The Mitotic Cell Cycle
- Mitosis is just one part of the cell cycle. The
mitotic (M) phase is usually the shortest part of
the cell cycle. Mitotic cell division alternates
with the much longer interphase, where the cell
grows and copies its chromosomes.
Interphase can be divided into subphases -The G1
phase -The S phase (DNA synthesis) -The G2
phase During all three subphases, the cell grows
by producing proteins and cytoplasmic organelles.
6Mitosis is broken down into five subphases.
- Prophase
- Prometaphase
- Metaphase
- Anaphase
- Telophase and Cytokinesis
7Prophase The chromatin fibers become more
tightly coiled, condensing into discrete
chromosomes. The nucleoli disappear, and each
duplicated chromosome appears as two identical
sister chromatids joined together. In the
cytoplasm the mitotic spindle begins to form,
which is made of microtubules extending from the
two centrosomes.
Prometaphase The nuclear envelope fragments. The
chromosomes have become more condensed, and the
microtubules extend from each pole toward the
middle of the cell. Each of the two chromatids of
a chromosome has a specialized structure called a
kinetochore, located at the centromere region.
Microtubules attach to the kinetochores.
8Metaphase The centrosomes are now at opposite
poles of the cell. The chromosomes line up on the
metaphase plate with their centromeres on the
plate. The entire apparatus of microtubules is
called the spindle.
Anaphase The paired centromeres of each
chromosome separate, separating the sister
chromatids from each other. Each chromosome
begins moving to the opposite pole of the cell as
the kinetochore microtubules shorten. The poles
of the cell move farther apart as the
nonkinetochore microtubules lengthen.
9Telophase and Cytokinesis At telophase, the
daughter nuclei form at the two poles of the
cell. Nuclear envelopes arise from the fragments
of the parent cells nuclear envelope and other
portions of the endomembrane system. The
chromatin fiber of each chromosome becomes less
tightly coiled. Cytokinesis, the division of the
cytoplasm, is usually well underway by this time.
In animal cells, cytokinesis involves the
formation of a cleavage furrow, which pinches the
cell in two.
Cell Plate
10Mitosis in eukaryotes may have evolved from
binary fission in bacteria
- Prokaryotes reproduce by binary fission,
literally meaning division in half.
11Regulation of the Cell Cycle
- The sequential events of the cell cycle are
directed by the cell cycle control system, a
cyclically operating set of molecules in the cell
that both triggers and coordinates key events in
the cell cycle. - A checkpoint in the cell cycle is a critical
control point where stop and go-ahead signals can
regulate the cycle. Animal cells have built in
stop signals that halt the cell cycle until
overridden by go-ahead signals. The signals
report whether crucial cellular processes up to
that point have been completed correctly and
whether or not the cell should proceed. Three
major checkpoints are found in the G1, G2, and M
phases. - If a cell does not receive a go ahead-signal, it
will exit the cycle, switching into a nondividing
state called the G0 phase.
12Cyclins and Cyclin-Dependent Kinases
- Flunctuations in the abundance and activity of
cell cycle control molecules pace the events of
the cell cycle. Some of these molecules are
protein kinases, enzymes that activate or
inactivate other proteins by phosphorylating
them. Protein kinases give the go-ahead signals
at the G1 and G2 checkpoints. - The kinases that drive the cell cycle are always
present, but are in the inactive form much of the
time. To be active, a kinase has to be attached
to a cyclin, which is a protein. These kinases
are called cyclin-dependent kinases, or Cdks. - The activity of a Cdk rises and falls with
changes in the concentration of its cyclin
partner.
13- The first cyclin-Cdk complex discovered is called
MPF, or maturation-promoting factor - The peaks of MPF activity correspond to the peaks
of cyclin concentration. The cyclin level rises
during interphase, then drops during mitosis. - MPF triggers the cells passage past the G2
checkpoint into M phase. It causes the nuclear
envelope to fragment by phosphorylating proteins
of the nuclear lamina. - Later in the M phase, MPF switches itself off by
starting a process that leads to the destruction
of its cyclin. - The non-cyclin part, Cdk, still exists in the
cell, but is inactive until it associates with
new cyclin molecules synthesized during
interphase of the next round of the cycle.
14Internal Signals Messages from the Kinetochores
- The M phase checkpoint will not allow anaphase to
start unless all of the chromosomes are properly
attached to the spindle at the metaphase plate.
This ensures that the daughter cells do not end
up with a missing or extra chromosome. - A signal that delays anaphase originates at
kinetochores that are not yet attached to spindle
microtubules. These proteins trigger a signaling
pathway that keeps an anaphase-promoting complex
(APC) in an inactive state. - When all the kinetochores are attached to the
spindle, the wait signal stops. The APC then
becomes active and triggers the breakdown of
cyclin and the inactivation of proteins holding
the sister chromatids together, allowing then to
separate.
15External Signals Growth Factors
- There are many external factors, both chemical
and physical, that can influence cell division. - A growth factor is a protein released by certain
body cells that stimulates other cells to divide. - Ex platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), which
is made by blood cells called platelets.
Fibroblasts, a type of connective cell tissue,
have PGDF receptors on their plasma membranes.
PGDF molecules bind to these receptors, which
leads to stimulation of cell division. - When an injury occurs, platelets release PGDF,
which causes fibroblasts to grow, healing the
wound.
16- Density-dependent inhibition describes when
crowded cells stop dividing. When a cell
population reaches a certain density, the amount
of required growth factors and nutrients
available to each cell becomes insufficient to
allow continued cell growth. - Most animal cells also exhibit anchorage
dependence. In order to divide, they must be
attached to something, such as the inside of a
culture jar or the extracellular matrix of a
tissue.
17- Cancer cells do not exhibit density-dependent
inhibition or anchorage dependence. - They divide excessively and invade other tissues
- Cancer cells can go on dividing indefinitely if
they are given a continual supply of nutrients - Nearly all normal mammalian cells divide only
about 20 to 50 times before they stop dividing. - Cancer starts in the body when a single cell
undergoes transformation, the process that
converts a normal cell to a cancer cell. The
bodys immune system normally recognizes the cell
and destroys it, but sometimes it evades
destruction. - The cell can then divide to form a tumor, a mass
of abnormal cells. It the cells remain at the
original site, it is called a benign tumor, which
mostly does not cause serious problems. - If the tumor becomes invasive enough to impair
the functions of one or more organs, it is called
a malignant tumor. - The spread of cancer cells to locations distant
from the original site is called metastasis.