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Evolution and the foundations of biology. Cells and genetics. (Сhapter 9)
1. BIO 122: Cells and Genetics Chapter 9: The Cell Cycle
Karen S Kabnick, PhD2. Bio 122: Cells and Genetics
1. Evolution and the Foundations of Biology2. Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life
3. A Tour of the Cell
4. Membrane Structure and Function
5. An Introduction to Metabolism
6. Cellular Respiration and Fermentation
7. Photosynthesis
8. Cell Communication
9. The Cell Cycle
10. Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
11. Mendel and the Gene Idea
12. The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance
13. The Molecular Basis of Inheritance
14. Gene Expression: From Gene to Protein
15. Viruses
3. Bio 122: Cells and Genetics
1. Evolution and the Foundations of Biology2. Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life
3. A Tour of the Cell
4. Membrane Structure and Function
5. An Introduction to Metabolism
6. Cellular Respiration and Fermentation
7. Photosynthesis
8. Cell Communication
9. The Cell Cycle
10. Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
11. Mendel and the Gene Idea
12. The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance
13. The Molecular Basis of Inheritance
14. Gene Expression: From Gene to Protein
15. Viruses
4. Chapter 9: The Cell Cycle
• Cell Replication– Prokaryotic: binary fission
– Eukaryotic: cell cycle and mitosis
• Controlling the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
• Failure to Control the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle:
Cancer
5. Chapter 9: The Cell Cycle
• Cell Replication– Prokaryotic: binary fission
– Eukaryotic: cell cycle and mitosis
• Controlling the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
• Failure to Control the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle:
Cancer
6. Where do cells come from?
7. “Every cell from a cell” –Virchow’s Principle
Cell division= cell reproduction
= asexual reproduction
8.
Asexual reproduction• Offspring genetically identical to original cell or
organism (except mutations)
• All genes inherited from one parent
9. Chapter 9: The Cell Cycle
• Cell Replication– Prokaryotic: binary fission
– Eukaryotic: cell cycle and mitosis
• Controlling the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
• Failure to Control the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle:
Cancer
10. Bacterial Cell Division: Binary Fission
11. Bacterial Cell Division: Binary Fission
12. Bacterial Cell Division: Binary Fission
13.
Prokaryotic chromosomes14. Asexual Reproduction = binary fission (prokaryotes)
• Occurs in prokaryotic cells• Two identical cells arise from one cell (except
mutations)
• Process
1. Single circular chromosome duplicates (copies identical
except for mutations)
2. Copies begin to separate from each other
3. Cell elongates, and chromosomal copies separate
further
4. Plasma membrane grows inward at midpoint to divide
into two cells
15. Chapter 9: The Cell Cycle
• Cell Replication– Prokaryotic: binary fission
– Eukaryotic: cell cycle and mitosis
• Controlling the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
• Failure to Control the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle:
Cancer
16.
Asexual Reproduction = mitosis (eukaryotes)= cell reproduction
17. Cell division produces new cells in order to:
• Produce new unicellular cells• Heal wounds and replace
damaged cells/tissues
• Grow and develop
18. What needs to happen for cell division to occur normally?
19. Overview of a cell cycle:
Three key events in a cellcycle:
Cell growth and
chromosome replication
Chromosomes segregate
Cell division
20.
M phase = Mitosis + cytokinesisMitosis: nuclear division
Cytokinesis: cytoplasmic division
21. Cell Cycle Phases
22. What do you think would happen if chromosomes did not coil tightly during mitosis?
A. Everything would be fine!B. DNA would not be properly divvied up!
0%
A.
0%
B.
23. Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
• Interphase– G1 – growth
– S – synthesis/replication
– G2 – growth
• M Phase: Mitosis and cytokinesis
24. How Cells Divide
Movies: Salmon Lab, cam.ac.uk, bio.davidson.edu25. Mitotic Chromosomes: Human Genome
Image: Lodish, Berk, Zipursky, Matsudaira, Batimore and Darnell. (1999). Molecular Cell Biology, 4th ed. W.H. Freeman & Co.26.
How is linear DNA packaged into chromosomes??
27. Levels of DNA Packaging
222-nm double-stranded DNA molecule
11-nm nucleosomes
30-nm chromatin fiber
Organization around a central scaffold
28.
Nucleosomes29. Karyotype
Diploid = 2nHaploid = n
30.
Homologous pair ofchromosomes
Paternal
chromosome
Maternal
chromosome
Non-sister
chromatids
Sister chromatids
Centromere
One duplicated
chromosome
31. Cell Cycle Phases
32.
Chromosomeduplication
Centromere
Sister
chromatids
Chromosome
distribution
to
daughter
cells
33. Chromosomes
34. Before DNA replication in S of cell cycle
35. After DNA replication
36. After cell division
37. From prophase through metaphase of mitosis, each chromosome has _____ DNA molecules, while from anaphase through telophase of mitosis, each chromosome has _____ DNA molecule(s).
A.B.
C.
D.
E.
two; one
2n; 1n
homologous; nonhomologous
condensed; decondensed
nonsister chromatid; sister
0% chromatid
0%
0%
A.
B.
C.
0%
0%
D.
E.
38. Cell Cycle Phases
39. Interphase
• G1 – growth• S – synthesis/replication/centrosome
replication
• G2 – growth
40. G2: Prior to Mitosis
41.
Centrosome: MTOC42.
43. Cell Cycle Phases
44. The Stages of Mitosis
Prophase
Prometaphase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase
45. The Stages of Mitosis: Prophase
46. The Stages of Mitosis: Prometaphase
47. The Stages of Mitosis: Metaphase
Alignment ofchromosomes along
metaphase plate
– Not an actual structure
– Future axis of cell
division
48. The Mitotic Spindle
Aster microtubules49. Kinetochore
50. The Stages of Mitosis: Anaphase
51. Chromosome Movement in Anaphase
52.
Chromosome Movement in Anaphase53. The Stages of Mitosis: Telophase
54. Cytokinesis
55. Cytokinesis: Plant Cells
56. Which of the following statements INCORRECTLY matches the cell cycle phase with the description?
A. S phase: DNA of each chromosome is replicatedB. Telophase: each chromosome has one double-stranded DNA
molecule
C. Metaphase: kinetochore on the chromosome loses its attachment
to spindle microtubulesDuring G1, the DNA in the nuclear
chromosomes is not all highly condensed.
D. G1: nuclear chromosomal DNA is not all highly condensed
E. Metaphase: each chromosome consists of two
double-stranded DNA helices linked together at a
centromere
0%
A.
0%
0%
B.
C.
0%
0%
D.
E.
57. Chapter 9: The Cell Cycle
• Cell Replication– Prokaryotic: binary fission
– Eukaryotic: cell cycle and mitosis
• Controlling the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
• Failure to Control the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle:
Cancer
58. Cell Cycle Phases
59. Basic Problems in Cell Cycle Control
• DNA must be replicated once per cell cycle• Sister chromatids must segregate accurately
• Cell division must be coupled to growth and
conditions
• Events must be coordinated
60. Cell Cycle Control
Sufficient cell size, nutrients, GFs?Are chromosomes
aligned properly and
attached to spindle?
Is DNA copied properly and once?
61. What controls the Cell Cycle?
62. What controls cell cycle progression? Cyclins and Cyclin-Dependent Kinases
inhibitoryactivating
63. G2/M Checkpoint Progression: Relationship between Cyclin B levels and CDK1 activity
MG1
S
G2
M
G1
S
MPF activity
Cyclin
concentration
Time
Cyclin B+CDK1 = MPF
G2
M
G1
64. Relationship Between CyclinB Levels and CDK1 activity
65.
Cyclin B is necessary, but NOT sufficientInhibitory cdk1 phosphate must be
removed (phosphatase) before MFP
is active (active cdk1)
66.
cdk167. Different CDK/Cyclin Complexes are Important at Different Points in the Cell Cycle
68. Cell Cycle Control
Sufficient cell size, nutrients, GFs?Are chromosomes
aligned properly and
attached to spindle?
Is DNA copied properly and once?
69. The Spindle Checkpoint
Anaphase promoting complex (APC)Cohesin
70.
71. Internal Signals that Regulate Cell Cycle Progression
• DNA Damage (G2/M checkpoint)• Incomplete replication (G2/M checkpoint)
• Chromosomes are misaligned (Mitotic/spindle
checkpoint)
72. External Signals that Regulate Cell Cycle Progression
• Growth Factors (G1/G0 checkpoint)• Cell Density
• Anchorage
73. External Signals that Regulate Cell Cycle Progression
• Growth Factors (G1/G0 checkpoint)• Cell Density
• Anchorage
74. Cell Cycle Control
Is the cell sufficiently big?Sufficient growth factors?
Sufficient nutrients?
Are chromosomes
aligned properly and
attached to spindle?
Is DNA copied properly and once?
75. G1 Checkpoint
Is the cell sufficiently big? Sufficient growth factors? Sufficientnutrients?
G0
G1 checkpoint
G1
G1
76. The Mitotic Cell Cycle
G1/G2 = Gapor Growth
Phases
S = Synthesis
– when DNA
is replicated
Interphase =
G1/S/G2
77. Growth Factor Regulation of Cell Division
Without PDGF(platelet-derived
growth factor)
With PDGF
Cultured fibroblasts
10 µm
78. Cell Cycle Control
PDGF79.
Growth factorPlasma membrane
Receptor
protein
Signal
transduction
pathway
Relay
proteins
G1 checkpoint
Control
system
G1
M
G2
S
80.
81. External Signals that Regulate Cell Cycle Progression
• Growth Factors• Cell Density
• Anchorage
82. Effect of Cell Density on Cell Division
83. Effect of Cell Density on Cell Division => contact inhibition
Effect of Cell Density on Cell Division=> contact inhibition
84. External Signals that Regulate Cell Cycle Progression
• Growth Factors• Cell Density
• Anchorage
85. Anchorage Dependence and Cell Division
Growth FactorsCell Division
86. Chapter 9: The Cell Cycle
• Cell Replication– Prokaryotic: binary fission
– Eukaryotic: cell cycle and mitosis
• Controlling the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
• Failure to Control the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle:
Cancer
87. Cancer: Breaching the Controls that Maintain Normal Homeostasis
Do not require growth factors
No density-dependent inhibition
Anchorage independent
Ignore DNA damage (G2/M checkpoint)
Enter M (pass G2/M checkpoint) with
incompletely replicated DNA
• Bypass M/spindle checkpoint with misaligned
chromosomes
88. Development of Cancer is a Multi-Step Process
Figure 20-11 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)89. Loss of Density Dependence = Loss of Contact Inhibition
90. Development of Cancer is a Multi-Step Process
Figure 20-11 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)91.
Benign TumorMalignant Tumor
Figure 20-11 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008)
92. Cancer Growth and Metastasis
93. Cancer Growth and Metastasis
94. Does a mutation in any gene lead to cancer?
• Proto-oncogenes• Tumor Suppressor Genes
95.
96.
Activated Proto-oncogenes Promote Cancer• Proto-oncogenes normally promote cell growth in
response to proper signals
cell
proto-oncogene
• Mutated proto-oncogenes = oncogenes
• Oncogenes are overactive: always promote cellgrowth (gasoline tank always full)
97. What role do oncogenes play?
• Proto-oncogenes normally promote celldivision under proper conditions
– Oncogenes promote cell division all the time
(constitutively)
98. What role do oncogenes play?
– Oncogenes promote cell division all the time(constitutively)
– Example: mutated Ras
(oncogene)
G
F
Proto-oncogenes normally promote cell
division under the proper conditions
Ras
99. What role do oncogenes play?
Proto-oncogenes normally promote celldivision under the proper conditions
– Oncogenes promote cell division all the time
(constitutively)
– Example: mutated Ras
(oncogene)
Ras
100. What role do oncogenes play?
Proto-oncogenes normally promote celldivision under the proper conditions
– Oncogenes promote cell division all the time
(constitutively)
– Example: mutated Ras
(oncogene)
Ras
101.
Inactivated Tumor Suppressor GenesLead to Cancer
• Tumor Suppressor (TS) genes normally inhibit cell
growth
cell
TS gene
• Mutations that inactivate TS genes, prevent their
ability to inhibit cell growth
102. What role do oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes play?
• Proto-oncogenes normally promote cell divisionunder the proper conditions
– Oncogenes promote cell division all the time
(constitutively)
– Example: Ras, src
• Normal tumor suppressor genes inhibit cell
division unless conditions are right
– Mutant tumor suppressor genes lose their ability to
inhibit cell division
– Examples: Rb, p53, BRCA1, BRCA2
103.
Example: Rb104. Example: p53
Adapted from Zhou and Elledge. (2000) Nature 408:433105. Example: p53
106. Example: p53
107.
108.
109.
TP53 = p53Figure 9.4 The Biology of Cancer (© Garland Science 2007)
110. Cancer Treatment
• Radiation – damages DNA– Some cancer cells are more susceptible to death from
DNA damage – lost the ability to properly repair
• Chemotherapy – drugs toxic to dividing cells
– Side effects due to damage to normally dividing cells
• Directed therapies – specific to the relevant mutation
– Few exist
– No one cure for all cancer
111. Which of the following is NOT a typical trait of cancerous cells that makes them different from normal somatic cells?
A. Cancer cells often deactivate their apoptosissystems.
B. Cancerous cells are not as sensitive to contact
inhibition.
C. The cell cycle often proceeds faster in cancer cells.
D. Cancer cells are more mobile and less dependent
on anchorage.
E. Cancer cells have more effective DNA repair
activities.
0%
A.
0%
0%
B.
C.
0%
0%
D.
E.
112. Chapter 9: Learning Objectives
• What are key structures of chromosomes, especially as they related to mitosis?• What are the stages of the cell cycle? What happens in each stage? What is the
structure of DNA at different stages?
• Haploidy? Diploidy?
• Compare and contrast bacterial fission with eukaryotic cell cycle and mitosis.
• How is the cell cycle controlled? What role do cyclins/CDKs play? How is their
activity controlled?
• What functions are monitored at each checkpoint?
• What internal and external factors are required for cell cycle progression?
• What role do cohesins play in mitosis? What role does their degradation play?
• How does cytokinesis differ in animal and plant cells?
• How can the cell fail to be controlled properly? What does this lead to?
• How do oncogenes and mutant tumor suppressor genes promote cancer
development? Understand p53 and ras is the context of cancer progression.
113. Chapter 9: The Cell Cycle
• Cell Replication– Prokaryotic: binary fission
– Eukaryotic: cell cycle and mitosis
• Controlling the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle
• Failure to Control the Eukaryotic Cell Cycle:
Cancer
114. Bio 122: Cells and Genetics
1. Evolution and the Foundations of Biology2. Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life
3. A Tour of the Cell
4. Membrane Structure and Function
5. An Introduction to Metabolism
6. Cellular Respiration and Fermentation
7. Photosynthesis
8. Cell Communication
9. The Cell Cycle
10. Meiosis and Sexual Life Cycles
11. Mendel and the Gene Idea
12. The Chromosomal Basis of Inheritance
13. The Molecular Basis of Inheritance
14. Gene Expression: From Gene to Protein
15. Viruses