2- MoD; Cell Growth and Differentiation Flashcards
define cell division
the process by which a parent cell divides into two or more daughter cells
often precedes differentiation though there is overlap
describe the two main forms of cell growth
hypertrophy and hyperplasia
- hypertrophy = increased cell SIZE through increased macromolecule synthesis (proteins and lipids)
- hyperplasia = more cells
- through cell division and proliferation
define cell differentiation
the process where cells become specialized and acquire specific functions
how does differentiation occur?
cell fully exists the cell cycle and commits to terminal differentiation
elicits a tissue-specific gene expression which changes its shape and function
becomes a specific cell type = called a ‘post-mitotic’ cell
what is the similarity between cell division and differentiation?
they’re both governed by intracellular and extracellular signal which converge on gene promoters (called ‘co-incidence detectors’)
combinations of signals are integrated for regulating growth/ differentiation - promoter make a binary yes or no decision for the (level of) gene expression
how do extracellular signals work? - type of signals, their effects on growth & differentiation?
there are three kinds - paracrine, autocrine and endocrine = ligand signal binds to receptor, stimulating an intrac. cascade
induce effects for cell growth and differentiation such as:
- stimulating proliferation and promoting survival = e.g. mitogens
- inducing differentiation and inhibiting proliferation = e.g. TGF-beta
- induce apoptosis = e.g. TNF-alpha
how do extracellular signals induce gene expression? - mechanism?
growth factor/ protein binds to cell surface receptor = activates a signal transduction pathway via kinase cascade
signal transducers activate transcription factors in the nucleus - TFs drive exp. of downstream genes
mRNA produced and exported from nucleus to cytoplasm = translated into protein
protein can:
- remain in the cytoplasm and exerts its effects
- go to cell surface membrane and act as TF for other proteins
- affect other downstream genes
define paracrine, autocrine and endocrine signals
paracrine = signal produced locally by neighbouring cell to stimulate a different cell type with the appropriate cell surface receptor
autocrine = produced by a cell that also expresses the appropriate cell surface receptor - signal acts on the cell that produced it
endocrine = conventional hormones, released systemically for distant effects
describe the four stages of the cell cycle in terms of events and chromosome number
G1, S, G2 phases are interphase stages - cell grows larger, synthesises macromolecules, makes copies of its DNA
M phase - mitosis; cell divides into two haploid daughter cells (2N)
G1 phase - cell grows physically larger, copies organelles (between 2N-4N as it’s in the process of replicating its genome)
S phase - DNA synthesis, making copies of every chromosome and duplicating centrosomes (between 2N-4N)
G2 phase - cell grows more, makes proteins and organelles, reorganises contents for mitosis (4N)
what are the three main checkpoints of the cell cycle?
G1 restriction point
G2 checkpoint
M phase spindle checkpoint
describe the three checkpoints of the cell cycle - when they occur, what it checks for, what does that ensure?
three checkpoints - G1 restriction checkpoint, G2 checkpoint and M phase checkpoint
- G1 restriction checkpoint = occurs at the end of G1
- checks for DNA damage so errors don’t carry forward
- cell size, nutrient availability and metabolite stores
- ensures cell has sufficient resources and is in a suitable environment for DNA replication and cell division - G2 checkpoint = occurs at the end of G2
- checks for DNA damage, success of DNA synthesis and replication before mitosis
- ensures cell only progresses to mitosis if DNA is undamaged and correctly replicated - M phase spindle checkpoint = occurs during metaphase of mitosis
- checks physical positioning of of chromosomes attached to mitotic spindle before separation
- ensures proper chromosome segregation so each daughter cell gets the correct number of chromosomes
what is FACs?
fluorescence activated cell signalling
fluorescence flow cytometry technique that analyses and measures DNA content within a cell population
describe the difference in FAC flow cytometry traces between highly proliferative and less proliferative cell populations
highly proliferative - rate of cell division is high
- lower proportion of cells in G1 though it’s still the highest
- slightly more in S compared to a less proliferative popl
- G2/M relatively the same as its the time limited stage of cell division
less proliferative - rate of cell division is low
- G1 has the highest proportion of cells
- S phase has the least
- G2/M phase has the same as for a highly proliferative popl
how many genes encode for CDK proteins?
10
how many genes encode for cyclin proteins?
more than 20