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Cell Cycle Pg J-59 (see handout). Rudolf Virchow A German Physician 1855 : “Where a cell exists, there must have been a preexisting cell, just as the.

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Presentation on theme: "Cell Cycle Pg J-59 (see handout). Rudolf Virchow A German Physician 1855 : “Where a cell exists, there must have been a preexisting cell, just as the."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cell Cycle Pg J-59 (see handout)

2 Rudolf Virchow A German Physician 1855 : “Where a cell exists, there must have been a preexisting cell, just as the animal arises from an animal and the plant only from a plant.” “Omnis cellula e cellula”

3 Format of Cell Growth Cell Growth Increase in the number of cells Increase in the size of cells Volume – Surface Area Relationship Volume increases as the cube of the radius Surface area increases as the square of the radius Problems with transport – wastes out of cell and nutrients into cell

4 The Nucleus Controls Metabolic Functions Chromosomes (DNA) contain genetic information for all aspects of cell structures and functions Must produce EXACT copy of nucleus (chromosomes) for each new cell

5 Definitions Cell cycle : The life of a cell from its origin in the division of a parent cell until its own division into two Genome : The total DNA of a cell Chromosomes : Packages of DNA molecules Somatic Cells : All body cells except the reproductive cells (46) Gametes : Reproductive cells (23)

6 More Definitions Chromatin : DNA-Protein complex within the nucleus Sister Chromatids : Identical duplicated chromosomes Centromere : The centralized region joining two sister chromatids

7 Mitosis or Karyokinesis Duplication and division of nucleus and its contents (chromosomes) Need exact copies of cells with complete set of genetic information

8 Chromosome Duplication

9 A: Interphase Accounts for 90% of Cell Cycle Metabolically active – growth and synthesis Typical Eukaryotic appearance Chromosomes present but not visible Chromatin – long thin thread like appearance of the DNA + protein in an uncoiled nature Animal cells have 2 pairs of centrioles outside of the nuclear region Interphase : Divided into three sub-phases G 1, S, and G 2

10 A: Interphase G1 First “Gap” Cell is growing S Chromosomes duplicated G2 Second “Gap” Cell grows more in anticipation of cell division

11 Chromosomes of Interphase : DNA plus protein core Chromatin : thin thread like appearance DNA is metabolically active as cell functions and grows = G 1 Synthesis of new DNA = exact copies of each chromosome 46 chromosomes = G 1 92 chromosomes = S (synthesis of DNA) S = this cell is preparing to divide …….how do you know cell has completed S if chromatin isn’t visible? Weigh cell X ng vs. 2X ng

12 G 2 – Second Growth (Gap) This specific growth is directed towards cell division Different from G 1 Proteins for spindle fibers, etc

13 Progression of Chromosomes

14 Cell Cycle Regulation Checkpoint – stop and go-ahead signals can regulate the cycle Animal cells will typically stop at check points unless being overridden by go-ahead signals Three Major checkpoints : G 1, G 2, M phases G 1 Checkpoint –most important If the cell passes G 1 it will typically complete the cycle and divide G 0 phase – a Non-dividing state Most cells of the human body are in this state

15 Figure 12.13 Mitotic Regulation

16 Cyclins and Cyclin – Dependent Kinases Kinases : enzymes that activate or inactivate other proteins by phosphorylation Not active unless attached to a cyclin Cyclin – a protein that cyclically fluctuates within the cell Kinases are called : cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) MFK – promotes mitosis by phosphorylating various proteins Maturation-promoting-factor Discovered first

17 Figure 12.14 Molecular control of the cell cycle at the G 2 checkpoint

18 Figure 12.15 The effect of a growth factor on cell division - Fibroblasts

19 Figure 12.16 Density-dependent inhibition of cell division *Cells typically grow in a density dependent manner *Cells are anchorage dependent - they must attach to a container wall or ECM *This is the normal state *Cancer cells do not exhibit a density or anchorage dependence -they have escaped cell cycle controls!

20 Cancer Cells Escape cell cycle controls No anchorage or density dependence Can divide in culture infinitely Most cells divide 20-50 times and die Cancer cells = “Immortal”

21 Cancer Cells A normal cell undergoes “transformation” If it survives the immune system it can proliferate into a tumor A mass of abnormal cells within a normal tissue Benign Cells remain at the original site Malignant Becomes invasive enough to effect other organs

22 Figure 12.17 The growth and metastasis of a malignant breast tumor


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