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PG1005 Lecture 16 The Cell Cycle Dr. Neil Docherty My Teaching Objectives • To outline the basis of the division of the cell life cycle into 4 principal phases. • To introduce the concept of molecular control of cell cycle progression. • To highlight the importance of cell cycle check points in avoiding the survival of mutated cells Rudolf Virchow (1821-1902) • Omnis cellula e cellula All cells from cells (by division) The theory followed acceptance by Virchow of the work of Robert Remak (1815-1865) and Albert Kölliker (1817-1905). Cell Theory • All organisms are made up of one or more cells." • Cells are the fundamental functional and structural unit of life." • All cells come from pre-existing cells by division." The Cell Life Cycle • The cellular growth (G) phase and the cycle of duplication (D) of heritable material followed by fission (F) =The Cell Cycle (GDF) 4 major phases G1 S INTERPHASE G2 M Cell Cycle Frequency Varies With Maturation Cell Cycle Duration Can Vary With Cell Type • Embryonic cells-30 minutes • Intestinal epithelium-12 hours • Cultured Fibroblasts-20 hours Cell Cycle Control • During cell replication two main systems are operative 1) Duplicatory machinery Control check-Are conditions favourable for replication, is it required? PHASE G1 CHECKPOINT 2) Segregatory machinery Has DNA replication been completed, has it been completed with high fidelity? PHASE G2 CHECKPOINT Phosphoryl Transfer Enzymes (Kinases) and Adaptor Molecules Control Cell Cycle Progression Activating Adaptor Activated Kinase KINASE Primary Activating Phosphrylation KINASE Phosphorylative activation of cell cycle stage specific substrates e.g. enzymes Cyclical Activation of Protein Kinases and Cell Cycle Progression • Certain protein kinases (Cdks) acts as specific ON/OFF switches for the major stages of the cell cycle • Kinase phosphorylation activity is cyclically varied during the cell cycle by; -1) Changes in expression -2) Through binding of modulatory cyclin proteins or cdkinhibitors -3) Via fine tuning through specific phosphorylation snd dephosphorylation events -4) The cyclical degradation of cyclin molecules General Summary Note that slow time dependent build up of specific cyclins then their rapid degradation coincides with phase transitions. N.B Not all complexes shown for clarity-See next slide Major Cyclin and Cdks Complex Cyclin Cdk G1-Cdk G1/S-Cdk S-Cdk M-Cdk D E A B 4 and 6 2 2 1 Some Cdk-Activities • 1. M-Cdk Promotes chromosome condensation, nuclear envelope destruction, mitotic spindle formation • 2. S-Cdk Activation and deactivation of protein complex formation at sites at which DNA replication will originate Inhibitory Adaptor Molecules Put the Brakes on Cell Cycle Progression Activating Adaptor Inhibited Kinase KINASE Primary Activating Phosphrylation KINASE Inhibitory protein blocks ATP binding Blockade of phosphoryl transferase (kinase) activity Cdk-Inhibitors During G1 • After mitosis, levels of all cyclins are relatively low • The activity of S phase transition cyclin-Cdk complexes is blocked by the accumulation of inhibitors e.g (p21) DNA Damage Response • Prior to S phase, stimuli increasing DNA damage (e.g. UV light) cause activation of regulatory p53 protein. p53 (active) to the nucleus Binding to regulatory region of p21 gene Transcription/translation p21 protein Repair G1/S block Apoptosis Your Learning Objectives Your learning from today should focus on being able to; • Define what is meant by the term cell cycle • Pinpoint the key stages and checkpoints of the cell cycle • Explain how temporal changes in cyclin and CDK-I inhibitor expression drive and inhibit the cell cycle respectively • Describe the role of p53 in cell cycle control and hypothesise as to how p53 mutation might play a role in cancer