Chapter 6.6 - Cell Cycle Flashcards
The Cell Cycle Groups (6)
Interphase
- G0: resting. not actively dividing but cells are still working.
- S Phase: DNA Synthase. Synthesis phase replication of chromosomes (10-12 hours to complete).
- 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.
Mitosis
The process of cell division that produces identical daughter cells
Replication of chromosomes
Occurs during S Phase. Chromosomes only “condense” during prophase, in which the sister chromatids separate, creating two new centromeres (identical daughter cells)
Steps of Mitosis
- G2 of Interphase
- Prophase
- Prometaphase
- Metaphase
- Anaphase
- Telophase
G2 of Interphase
- Chromosomes have duplicated
- Two centrosomes are formed in this phase
Prophase
- Chromosomes have condensed
- Mitotic spindles form
Prometaphase
- Fragments/fragmentation of nuclear envelope
- microtubules attach to newly formed kinetochore
Metaphase
- Chromosomes align at the metaphase plate
- Centrosomes are at the opposite ends of the cell
Anaphase
- Separation of sister chromatids
- Cell elongates
Telophase
- Nuclear envelope on daughter nuclei reforms
- Cytokinesis soon follows
Mitotic Spindle
- centrosomes and microtubules growing out of them
- they move chromosomes around and elongate cells
Kinetochore
- 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)
Cohesin
The protein that binds sister chromatids together. *during anaphase cohesion is degraded
Metaphase and Microtubules important diagram
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
Kinetochore and Non-Kinetochore Microtubules
Microtubules that either bind or do not bind to the kinetochore
Motor proteins “walk” chromatids toward spindle poles
- Dinine walks toward centrosomes
- Microtubules disassemble behind it
Cytokinesis (5 Steps)
- 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
Cell Cycle Checkpoints diagram
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)
Apoptosis
Controlled cell death
Cyclin’s/CDK’s Regulate the Cell Cycle (3)
- Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK) present throughout cell cycle but not active
- CDK’s activated by binding specific cyclin
- Cyclin concentration varies according to stage
Cyclin diagram
Simply a regulatory protein that binds CDK
Mitosis Promoting Factor Activity
- 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*