The Cell Cycle Flashcards
What is mitosis?
- Cells create an exact copy of themselves RAG - Regenerate cells and tissues - Asexual reproduction - Growth
What is meiosis?
Sexual reproduction of an organism
What are the phases in the cell cycle?
IPPMAT Interphase: - G1 phase - G0 phase - S phase - G2 phase
M phase:
- Prophase
- Prometaphase
- Metaphase
- Anaphate
- Telophase
- Cytokinesis
What happens during G1 phase?
- After mitosis
- Human cells have 46 unduplicated chromosomes
- Cell grows, makes proteins and organelles
- Centrosome (and its two centrioles) duplicate
- Check that nutrients and environment are favourable for duplication
What happens during G0 phase?
- Cells stop dividing if they do not have the resources to continue
What happens in S phase?
- Before mitosis
- DNA is replicated by DNA polymerase
- Human cells have 46 duplicated chromosomes
- Each duplicated chromosome is made up of two sister chromatids joined at the centromere
What happens during G2 phase
- Cell continues to grow
- Check that all DNA is duplicated and undamaged
What happens during prophase?
- Mitotic spindle forms in the cytosol: microtubules extend from the centrosomes
- Chromatin becomes densely compacted
- Nucleolus disappears
What happens during pro metaphase?
- Nuclear envelope fragments
- Some spindle microtubules attach to the kinetochore at the centromeres
- Microtubules from opposite poles pull on chromosomes
What happens during metaphase?
- Chromosomes align on the metaphase plate with sister chromatids on each side
- Check that all kinetochores are properly attached to the spindle
What happens during anaphase?
- Sister chromatids pulled apart by microtubules
- Move towards opposite poles of the cell
- Other microtubules push the poles further apart
What happens during telophase?
- Cell elongates
- Chromosomes decondense, nuclear envelope and nucleolus reform
- Cytokinesis begins
What happens during cytokinesis
- Division of the cytoplasm
Animal cells:
- Cleavage furrow caused by internal microfilament contractile ring
- Parent cell pinches into two daughter cells
Plant cells:
- New cell wall is deposited by vesicles fusing within the parent cell
- Parent cell is internally divided into two daughter cells
How do prokaryotes reproduce?
By binary fission
How do viruses reproduce?
- Dependent on host for replication
- Viral genome can take over the host’s protein-making and other metabolic machinery
What happens when the cell cycle escapes control?
- Non-disjunction: failure of the chromosomes to separate properly
- Can cause aneuploidy: having more or less chromosomes than normal
- Many tumours are aneuploid (usually too many chromosomes)
- Cancer is caused by uncontrolled cell growth due to failure of cell cycle regulation
How does cell cycle regulation fail?
- Accidentally
- Mutations in cell cycle control proteins