Mechanisms Of Disease 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Define cell growth

A

A bigger organism would need more cells

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2
Q

Define differentiation

A

Cells become complex and usually there’s a end to growth
A program of cell type-specific gene expression
Cell morphology and function changes

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3
Q

What are 3 main groups of diseases related to cell growth and differentiation?

A

Developmental conditions
- can be cell growth or differentiation
- eg. Neural tube defects like spina bifida

Neoplasia
- cancer and tumours

Others
- eg. Cardio hypertrophy

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4
Q

What the two main forms of cell growth?

A

Hypertrophy - bigger cells
Hyperplasia - more cells (most common)

Controlled by cell death

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5
Q

What is hypertrophy?

A
  • cells grow bigger
  • more proteins, more membrane etc
  • elevated protein synthesis is a big driver of increased cell size
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6
Q

How is cell growth and differentiation governed?

A
  • intracellular signals and extracellular signals
  • signals converge on the promoters of key genes
  • promoters act as “coincidence detectors”
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7
Q

What is paracrine signalling?

A

Produced locally to stimulate proliferation of a different cell type that has the appropriate cell surface receptor

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8
Q

What is autocrine signalling?

A

Produced by a cell that also expresses the appropriate cell surface receptor

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9
Q

What is endocrine signalling?

A

Conventional hormones, released systemically for distant effects.

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10
Q

What are mitogens?

A

Proteins that stimulate and promote survival
Eg. Growth factors and interleukins (EGF, FGF, NGF, IL2, IL4)

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11
Q

What is the function of TGF(beta)?

A

Induce differentiation and inhibit proliferation

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12
Q

Describe and name the phases of the cell cycle

A

M phase - cells divide by mitosis
G1- has diploid number of chromosomes
S phase - DNA replication
G2 - tetraploid chromosomes

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13
Q

What is the G0 phase of the cell cycle?

A

Cells that have left the cell cycle are in this phase
Quiescent cells undergo terminal differentiation

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14
Q

How can FACS be used to analyse cell DNA content?

A
  • if DNA stain is applied
  • FACS machine can measure the DNA content of every cell in a population
  • Data is used to plot a graph
  • if the rate of division is high the number of cells in each stage of the cell cycle should be closer in proximity
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15
Q

How can fluorescent microscopy be used to observe the stages of the cell cycle?

A

The fluorescent stains allow us to see the cells.
Blue = DNA
Red = Y-Tubulidentata
Green = CHEK2
Yellow = centrioles

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16
Q

What are cell cycle checkpoints?

A

Controls involving protein kinases and phosphatase to ensure the strict alteration of mitosis and DNA replication.

17
Q

What is the checkpoint between G1 and S phase?

A

Restriction point
- DNA not damaged
- cell size big enough
- metabolite/nutrient stores

18
Q

What checkpoint occurs between G2 and M phase?

A
  • DNA completely replicated
  • DNA not damaged
19
Q

What is the checkpoint during mitosis?

A

Position of chromosomes aligned on spindle

20
Q

What is CDK?

A

Catalytic subunit
10 genes

21
Q

What is cyclin?

A

Regulatory subunit
> 20 genes
Expression induced by growth factors

22
Q

What happens when cyclin binds to CDK?

A

Active cyclin-CDK complex forms
Phosphorylates specific substrates

23
Q

How is cyclin-CDK activity regulated?

A
  • cycles of synthesis (gene expression) and destruction (by proteasome)
  • post translational modifications by phosphorylation
  • Dephosphorylation
  • binding of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CDKIs)
24
Q

What is retinoblastoma (RB) protein?

A

A key substrate of cyclin-dependent kinases of G1 and G1/s

25
Q

How does RB usually function?

A

Unphosphorylated RB binds to E2F transcription factor

Preventing its stimulation of S-phase protein expression

But in the presence of Cyclin D-CDK4 + Cyclin E-CDK2

RB gets phosphorylated and detaches from E2F

Allowing E2F to stimulate the expression of more cyclin E (positive feedback) and S-phase proteins

26
Q

What 3 things occur when DNA damage is detected?

A

Stop the cell cycle (by expression of cyclin dependent kinase inhibitors)

Attempt DNA repair (nucleotide or base excision enzymes, mismatch repair)

Programmed cell death (BCL2 family, caspases)

27
Q

What is the role of TP53 or P53?

A

In cells with healthy DNA TP53 is destroyed by proteasome and there would be barley any of it in the cell.

In damaged DNA cells kinases are activated which phosphorylate TP53.

Phosphorylated TP53 expresses CDKI where it will cause cell cycle arrest. It also leads to DNA repair.

If repair isn’t possible apoptosis occurs.

28
Q

How can mutations in TP53 cause cancer?

A
  • prevent cell cycle arrest (FASTER GROWTH)
  • prevent apoptosis (DO NOT DIE)
  • prevent DNA repair (MORE MUTATIONS)
29
Q

What are chemotherapeutic drugs?

A

Drugs that act on the cell cycle
Objective: stop proliferation, induce apoptosis
eg. S-phase drugs and M-phase drugs

30
Q

What are ways S-phase drugs can cause DNA damage?

A
  • 5-flurouracil (PREVENTS SYNTHESIS IF THYMIDINE)
  • Cisplatin. (BINDS TO DNA CAUSING DAMAGE OR BLOCK REPAIR)
31
Q

What are 2 examples of M-Phase drugs?

A

Vinca alkaloids and paclitaxel (Taxol)

32
Q

What is the function of Vinca Alchaloids?

A
  • stabilise free Tubulin
  • prevent microtubule polymerisation
  • arrest cells in mitosis
33
Q

What is the function of Palcitaxel (Taxol) drugs?

A
  • stabilises microtubules
  • preventing de-polymerisation
  • arrests cell in mitosis