Cellular Division and Replication Flashcards
What is cell populations in adult tissues regulated by?
The relative rates of proliferation, differentiation and death.
What is meant by cell proliferation?
- Involves physiological or pathological stimuli
- Controlled by either cell contact or soluble signals
How can increased cell proliferation be accomplished?
- By shortening the cell division cycle
- Recruiting inactive cells to divide and proliferate
State the three types of cells.
- Labile cells
- Stable cells
- Non-dividing (permanent) cells
Describe labile cells.
Constantly dividing, regenerate rapidly e.g. surface epithelium
Describe stable cells.
Low level of replicative activity but can rapidly divide in response to stimuli e.g. liver
Describe non-dividing (permanent) cells.
Terminally differentiated unable to proliferate e.g. neurons
Describe interphase
G1 Phase:
- Period before synthesis of DNA
- Variable in length between cell types
- May be indistinguishable from G0
S phase (synthesis)
- Nuclear DNA is synthesised
- Chromosomes are duplicated
G2 Phase
- After DNA synthesis is complete
-Lasts until cell division (mitosis) phase
State and describe the five phases of mitosis.
Prophase: centrioles move to poles
Prometaphase: Microtubules attach to chromosomes
Metaphase: Chromosomes align, nuclei disappears
Anaphase: Chromosomes divide and move to poles
Telophase: Nuclear membrane reappears and cytokinesis occurs
Which protein regulates the cell cycle?
Cyclin CDK
Describe the action of cyclin-CDK.
- Cyclin binding changes Cdk exposing its active site.
- A protein substrate and ATP bind to Cdk - the protein substrate is phosphorylated
- The phosphorylated protein regulates the cell cycle - each Cdk has specific protein targets.