2- MoD; Cell Growth and Differentiation Flashcards

1
Q

define cell division

A

the process by which a parent cell divides into two or more daughter cells

often precedes differentiation though there is overlap

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2
Q

describe the two main forms of cell growth

A

hypertrophy and hyperplasia

  1. hypertrophy = increased cell SIZE through increased macromolecule synthesis (proteins and lipids)
  2. hyperplasia = more cells
    - through cell division and proliferation
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3
Q

define cell differentiation

A

the process where cells become specialized and acquire specific functions

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4
Q

how does differentiation occur?

A

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

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5
Q

what is the similarity between cell division and differentiation?

A

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

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6
Q

how do extracellular signals work? - type of signals, their effects on growth & differentiation?

A

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

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7
Q

how do extracellular signals induce gene expression? - mechanism?

A

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

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8
Q

define paracrine, autocrine and endocrine signals

A

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

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9
Q

describe the four stages of the cell cycle in terms of events and chromosome number

A

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)

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10
Q

what are the three main checkpoints of the cell cycle?

A

G1 restriction point
G2 checkpoint
M phase spindle checkpoint

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11
Q

describe the three checkpoints of the cell cycle - when they occur, what it checks for, what does that ensure?

A

three checkpoints - G1 restriction checkpoint, G2 checkpoint and M phase checkpoint

  1. 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
  2. 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
  3. 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
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12
Q

what is FACs?

A

fluorescence activated cell signalling

fluorescence flow cytometry technique that analyses and measures DNA content within a cell population

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13
Q

describe the difference in FAC flow cytometry traces between highly proliferative and less proliferative cell populations

A

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

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14
Q

how many genes encode for CDK proteins?

A

10

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15
Q

how many genes encode for cyclin proteins?

A

more than 20

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16
Q

what are CDKs?

A

cyclin-dependent kinases, regulate the cell cycle and work with cyclin proteins (regulatory proteins)

17
Q

what is cyclin?

A

regulatory protein - forms a complex with CDK which activates a kinase cascade, phosphorylating specific substrates
cyclin expression is influenced by external signals - e.g. mitotic signals from growth factors

18
Q

how is cyclin-CDK pathway regulated?

A

cyclin proteins have a high rate of turnover- are constantly synthesised, expressed and destroyed

post-transcriptional modifications via phosphorylation and dephosphorylation affect kinase activity, and result in activation/ inhibition/ destruction

bindings of CDKIs/ cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors will inhibit cyclin-CDK complex activity

19
Q

describe the RB protein, cyclin and CDK mechanism for cell cycle regulation

A

RB is a regulatory protein for G1 to S phase transition, and a key CDK substrate

unphosphorylated RB binds E2F TFs - prevents their transcriptional activity, suppresses expression of S phase proteins

specific CDK-cyclin complexes phosphorylate RB - cause a conformational change - dissociates from E2Fs

allows E2Fs to be transcriptionally active - drives expression of S phase proteins like DNA polymerase, and drives cyclin-E exp. forward (positive feedforward loop between E2Fs and cyclin-E)

20
Q

what are the specific CDK-cyclin complexes for RB phosphorylation?

A

cyclin-D and CDK-4
cyclin-E and CDK-2

21
Q

describe the sequential events of the cell cycle relating to gene expression and cyclin-CDK activity

A

mitogens in early G1 stimulate the expression of early genes, including TFs

TFs induce expression of delayed genes like cyclin-D

cyclin-D forms cyclin-CDK complexes with CDKs 4 & 6

cyclin D-CKD 4 hypo-phosphorylate RB protein = minimal level of phosphorylation = minimal repression of E2Fs, allows some activity = allows low level expression of cyclin-E

cyclin E - CDK 2 complexes activate - cause hyperphosphorylation of RB protein

RB can no longer repress E2Fs - E2F activity remains high throughout S phase, E2F responsive genes are activated

sequential activation of various CDK-cyclin complexes occurs:
- cyclin E -CDK 2 phosphorylates and activates cyclin-A and CDK-2 = activates cyclin A and CDK 1 = activated cyclin B and CDK-1
- S-G2/M phase cyclin-CDK complexes until cyclin B-CDK 1

at the end of M phase - RB dephosphorylates, can repress E2Fs again, mediated by PP1

22
Q

at what checkpoints is DNA damage checked at? what occurs if DNA damage is detected?

A

G1 to S restriction point
end of G2 checkpoint

detected - cell cycle stops, driven by CDKI/ cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors and cell attempts to repair damage through repair mechanisms

if damage is too great - cell is reprogrammed for apoptosis through expression of apoptotic genes and enzyme activations

23
Q

what is TP53?

A

a tumour suppressor gene

continually destroyed by proteasomes and synthesised/ high turnover in a cell with viable/ normal DNA

24
Q

describe how TP53 is involved in DNA damage repair and apoptosis

A

DNA damage in a cell is picked up by complex processes - activates DNA-dependent kinases

TP53 is phosphorylated - prevents its destruction by proteasomes

TP53 accumulates in cell and exerts its biological effects:
- acts as a TF, drives CDKI expression = induces cell cycle arrest
- activates DNA repair mechanisms - if cell DNA is successfully repaired, it returns to the cell cycle
- if repair is unsuccessful = TP53 activates apoptotic mechanisms by driving apoptotic gene and enzyme expression

25
Q

what’s the significance of TP53 in cancer?

A

loss of function mutations in TP53 are common in cancer - frequently observed in cancer

effects:
- prevent apoptosis = no cell death
- prevent cell cycle arrest = faster proliferation, uncontrolled
- prevent DNA repair = DNA mutations accumulate from lack of DNA repair, contributed to cancer development and tumour heterogeneity which allows it to adapt to microenvironment and resist therapies - drives cancer progression

26
Q

how does 5-fluorouracil work as a chemotherapy drug?

A

S phase drug that targets DNA damage

prevents thymidine synthesis which is required to make more DNA

27
Q

how does cisplatin work as a chemotherapy drug?

A

S phase drug that targets DNA damage

binds to DNA causes damage and blocks repair mechanisms, induces cell death

28
Q

how do vinca alkaloids work as a chemotherapy drug?

A

M phase drug that targets mitotic spindle

binds to and stabilises free/monomeric tubulin

prevents microtubule polymerisation = can’t form the mitotic spindle

arrests cell in mitosis, apoptosis occurs

29
Q

how does Paciltaxel work as a chemotherapy drug?

A

M phase drug that targets mitotic spindle

binds to and stabilises polymerised/ multimeric microtubule complexes = prevents their depolymerisation

arrests cell in mitosis, causes a rest in M phase and induces apoptosis

30
Q

how does colchicine work as a chemotherapy drug?

A

a similar mode of action to vinca alkaloids - binds to and stabilises monomeric tubulin, prevents microtubule polymerisation, can’t form mitotic spindle

cell arrested in mitosis and apoptosis occurs

31
Q

what are the two types of chemotherapy drugs? what do they target?

A

S phase drugs - target DNA damage
- 5-fluorouracil
- cisplatin

M phase drugs - target the mitotic spindle
- vinca alkaloids
- Pacitaxel
- colchicine