Lecture 1- The cell cycle Flashcards
What is the cell cycle clock?
A network of interacting proteins that receives signals from outside and inside the cell, integrates them and decides the cell’s fate.
What 2 fates can the cell cycle clock decide?
- Proliferation- cell cycle of growth a division
2. Quiescence- non-proliferation state imposed on the cell
What is the structure of the cell cycle?
INTERPHASE:
- G1 phase- cell increase in size
- ribosome, RNA produced
- preparation for DNA synthesis - S phase- DNA synthesised (chromosomes duplicated)
- G2 phase- cell checks fidelity of DNA
- preparation for nuclear division
MITOSIS (cell division): prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase and cytokinesis
What are the 2 major cell cycle control factors?
- The normal control by different cyclins. This drives the cycle forward.
- Mechanisms to stop the cycle (and correct) if there are problems i.e checkpoints
Give the pairings of cyclins with CDKs and the activity they modulate.
G1: CDK4 and CDK6 pairs with cyclin D
After the R point: Cyclin E associate with CDK2 —> lead to phosphorylation of substrates required for entry in S phase
Early S phase: Cyclin A replace Cyclin E in complex with CDK2 —> leads to S phase progression.
Later S phase: Cyclin A associate with CDK1
G2: Cyclin B replace Cyclin A in the CDK1 complex
M phase: Cyclin B/CDK1 —> mitosis triggering
G0 to G1: mediated by Cyclin C/CDK3 complex
How do Cyclin E, A and B levels fluctuate during the cell cycle?
Cyclin E: low levels throughout most of G1, rapid increase after the R point.
Cyclin A: levels increase in concert with the entrance in S phase.
Cyclin B: levels increase in anticipation of mitosis
Which Cyclin is an exception and why?
Cyclin D
- controlled by extracellular signals
- removal of growth factors leads to rapid collapse of Cyclin D1 levels
- cyclin D convey messages from the extracellular environment to the cell Cyclin clock in the nucleus
- cyclin D are synthesised in the cytoplasm and transported in the nucleus
What controls cyclins levels during the cell cycle?
Controlled by intracellular signals and coordinated with cell cycle advance
Cyclin/CDKs activate complexes of the subsequent phase and inhibit those active in the previous phase
EXCEPTION: Cyclin D is controlled by extracellular signals
What controls the cell cycle before and after the R point?
Before R point, programme is influenced by extracellular signals.
After R point, programme is cell autonomous.
What do CKIs regulate?
Cyclin/CDKs
What are the cell cycle checkpoints and what do they check for?
G2 checkpoint: is all DNA replicated, is the cell big enough, is the environment favourable?
Metaphase checkpoint: are all chromosomes aligned on spindle?
G1 checkpoint: is the cell big enough, is environment favourable, is there DNA damage?
Restriction points: sense environmental changes
Describe G1/S restriction point progression.
- Cyclin D has a high turnover and its levels can only be maintained under continuous mitogen signalling.
- As levels of cyclin D/CDK4 are maintained, Rb is hypo-phosphorylated
- This allows some E2F transcription
- E2F causes Cyclin E/CDK2 to accumulate and this hyper-phosphorylates Rb to fully release E2F transcription and enter S phase
What are the 3 places where DNA damage is detected and acted upon to stop the cell cycle?
- G1
- Entry to S phase
- Entry into mitosis
What happens to damaged DNA?
- Break in DNA
- ATM/ATR get activated and associate with the site of DNA damage and activates other kinases (Chk1/Chk2) to block the cell cycle
- p53 is phosphorylated which stabilises and turns on p21 (a CKI)
- p21 renders the G1/S-CDK and S-CDK complexes inactive, preventing cycle progression
- DNA is repaired or apoptosis occurs
What is the G1: growth vs quiescence decision?
A discrete windows to consult the extracellular environment.
From the onset of G1 to a few hours before the G1 to S phase transition.