Chapter 6.6 - Cell Cycle Flashcards

1
Q

The Cell Cycle Groups (6)

A

Interphase

  1. G0: resting. not actively dividing but cells are still working.
  2. S Phase: DNA Synthase. Synthesis phase replication of chromosomes (10-12 hours to complete).
  3. G2: Gap 2 growth and preparation for cell division.

Mitosis/M Phase
1. Cytokinesis and Mitosis

*entire cycle takes approximately 15-24 hours in humans. Once replication begins it must be completed.

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2
Q

Mitosis

A

The process of cell division that produces identical daughter cells

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3
Q

Replication of chromosomes

A

Occurs during S Phase. Chromosomes only “condense” during prophase, in which the sister chromatids separate, creating two new centromeres (identical daughter cells)

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4
Q

Steps of Mitosis

A
  1. G2 of Interphase
  2. Prophase
  3. Prometaphase
  4. Metaphase
  5. Anaphase
  6. Telophase
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5
Q

G2 of Interphase

A
  • Chromosomes have duplicated

- Two centrosomes are formed in this phase

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6
Q

Prophase

A
  • Chromosomes have condensed

- Mitotic spindles form

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7
Q

Prometaphase

A
  • Fragments/fragmentation of nuclear envelope

- microtubules attach to newly formed kinetochore

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8
Q

Metaphase

A
  • Chromosomes align at the metaphase plate

- Centrosomes are at the opposite ends of the cell

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9
Q

Anaphase

A
  • Separation of sister chromatids

- Cell elongates

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10
Q

Telophase

A
  • Nuclear envelope on daughter nuclei reforms

- Cytokinesis soon follows

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11
Q

Mitotic Spindle

A
  • centrosomes and microtubules growing out of them

- they move chromosomes around and elongate cells

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12
Q

Kinetochore

A
  • where the microtubules attach to the chromosome pairs

- only way to do this is by getting rid of the nuclear envelope (re-forms during telophase)

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13
Q

Cohesin

A

The protein that binds sister chromatids together. *during anaphase cohesion is degraded

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14
Q

Metaphase and Microtubules important diagram

A

Kinetochore Microtubules: Chromatids move along these to the opposite end of the cell

Non-Kinetochore Microtubules: These overlap and allow motor proteins to walk along the opposite microtubule, elongating the cell, (region of overlap is reduced). This overlap of microtubules pushes the centrosomes apart

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15
Q

Kinetochore and Non-Kinetochore Microtubules

A

Microtubules that either bind or do not bind to the kinetochore

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16
Q

Motor proteins “walk” chromatids toward spindle poles

A
  • Dinine walks toward centrosomes

- Microtubules disassemble behind it

17
Q

Cytokinesis (5 Steps)

A
  • Divides up cell contents
  • Contractile Ring (cleavage furrow) forms at the “metaphase plate”
  • Ring made up of microfilaments (actin) and the motor protein myosin
  • Myosin walks along the microfilaments, causing the ring to contract
  • Cleavage furrow forms
18
Q

Cell Cycle Checkpoints diagram

A

G1: Commitment Stage; The cell is committed to dividing and dies if it doesn’t
G2: Ensures that replication is done. Spindle checkpoint (M checkpoint)

19
Q

Apoptosis

A

Controlled cell death

20
Q

Cyclin’s/CDK’s Regulate the Cell Cycle (3)

A
  • Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK) present throughout cell cycle but not active
  • CDK’s activated by binding specific cyclin
  • Cyclin concentration varies according to stage
21
Q

Cyclin diagram

A

Simply a regulatory protein that binds CDK

22
Q

Mitosis Promoting Factor Activity

A
  • MPF only occurs during M phase
  • Essentially just the active CDK/Cyclin
  • CDK enzyme is present throughout the cell cycle, but its concentration and activity isn’t interchangeable
  • problem questions in slide*