PAUSE - CELL CYCLE 1 Flashcards
what are the stages of the cell cycle?
- chromosome replication and cell growth
- chromosome segregation
- cell division
what is part of the M phase?
nuclear division (mitosis) and cell division (cytokinesis)
only a small part of the cell cycle
between what two phases of mitosis does an abrupt change in biochemical state of the cell happen?
between metaphase and anaphase
when is the point of no return in cell division?
between metaphase and anaphase
after that point the cell has to divide
when does DNA replication happen?
S phase of interphase
what are the phases of the cell cycle?
G1
S phase
G2
M phase (mitosis and cytokinesis)
what happens to the cell cycle at high temperatures?
the cell continues normally till it reaches a specific step that it is unable to complete
continues to grow but doesnt continue, becomes abnormally large
halts depending on what biochemical reserve they run out of
how can the effect of a cdc mutation be seen under a microscope?
in a normal population buds vary in size according to cell cycle
in a mutated population they are all the same size because they all stop at the same stage
how does oocyte growth and cell cleavage work in the frog?
oocyte grows without dividing for many months and matures into an egg
at fertilisation egg divides rapidly (1 division every 30 minutes)
multicellular tadpole formed within day or two
cells get smaller but embryo remains same size
growth starts when tadpole begins feeding
how was the cell cycle studied in a cell free system?
large batch of activate frog eggs broken by gentle centrifugation
undiluted cytoplasm collected and sperm nuclei added to it, together with TP
sperm nuclei decondense and go through repeated cycles of DNA replication and mitosis
indicated that cel cycle control system is operating in the cell free cytoplasm extract
how to differentiate cells that are in mitosis vs not in an electron micrograph?
cells not in mitosis are flat and attached to others
cells that are round are in mitosis
how does a flow cytometer (or also called fluorescence activated cell sorter FACS) analyse DNA content?
cells are stained with dye that becomes fluorescent when it binds to DNA
amount of fluorescence is proportional to teh amount of DNA in each cell
in which categories do cells fall in a flow cytometer graph?
those in the G1 phase: unreplicated complement of DNA (most abundant)
those in the G2 or M phase: have a fully replicated complement of DNA (twice the G1 content)
in the S phase: intermediate amount of DNA content
less than 1: cells when they die
more than 2: too much replication, cancer
what are the advantages of studying the cell cycle in yeast?
- Small genome
- Fast duplication (about 20 minutes)
- Haploid genome: easy to modify or delete genes