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Cancer, Cell communication and the Cell Cycle I. Cell Cycle – Chapter 18 You will not be responsible for: details of S-CdK function mechanisms of spindle assembly and anaphase specific details of the caspase cascade & bcl-2 family topics on extracellular signals (pp 636- 640) not covered in class Review mitosis on your own Panel 18-1, etc Read on your own about cytokinesis in plant and animal cells pp 630 - 633 Questions in this chapter you should be able to answer: Chapter 18: 1 - 5, 10, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 20, 25, 26 all but C, 28, 30 Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 1 What are the stages of the cell-cycle? -- a review G1 S G2 M G0 Table 18–1 Some Eucaryotic Cell-Cycle Times Cell type Cell cycle time Early frog embryo cells ~30 minutes Yeast cells 1.5–3 hours Intestinal epithelial cells ~12 hours cultured fibroblasts ~20 hours Human liver cells ~1 year Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 2 Tumor suppressor proteins are ‘Gatekeepers’ and ‘Caretakers’ of the cell Stop Go Die Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 3 Mutated Tumor Suppressor Genes disable the corresponding Tumor Suppressor Proteins . . . Cells divide when they shouldn’t Cells do not die when they should Cells progress toward metastasis Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 4 Cells of cancers accumulate numerous chromosomal abnormalities Meningioma karyotype Deletions Aneuploidy - #s 7, 9, 20 Missing homolog - #1, 17, Y Translocations - #s 2, 6, 7 Translocations Inversions Duplications Should trigger apoptosis Tick and Sick-6 5 Some examples of inactivated Tumor Suppressor Proteins and Oncogenes Tick and Sick-6 6 Tumor Suppressor Proteins are part of the “Cell-cycle Control System” The ‘Checkpoint’ model How are they controlled? -- intracellular and extracellular signals What are the effectors -- lots of kinases & phosphatases Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 7 How is cell cycle progress studied? Different systems -- yeast: cell cycle mutations -- frog: big dividing embryos -- sea urchin & clam: many embryos Asynchronously dividing cells DNA/nucleus staining Flow cytometry DAPI stained cells Ques 18-2 Where are G1,S,G2, & M stage cells? Synchronously dividing cells Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 8 What did study of frog embryos reveal about the control system? Be sure to read How we know Frog egg cytoplasmic transfer experiments Something in the cytosol triggers mitosis -- called MPF Activity of MPF oscillates during the cell cycle What is MPF? Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 9 What did sea urchin & clam embryos reveal? Population of synchronously dividing embryos S35 labeling, SDS-PAGE, autoradiography Revealed cyclic synthesis & breakdown of certain proteins Called cyclin Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 10 What do we know about MPF & cyclin? MPF is a cyclin bound to a Cdk ‘cyclin-dependent protein kinase’ Table 18–2 The Major Cyclins and Cdks of Vertebrates = M-Cdk Cyclin–Cdk Complex Several Cyclins and Cdks -- regulate different cell cycle events G1-Cdk G1/S-Cdk S-Cdk M-Cdk Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation Cyclin cyclin D cyclin E cyclin A cyclin B Cdk partner Cdk4, Cdk6 Cdk2 Cdk2 Cdk1 11 How is cyclin-CDK activity regulated? Two processes 1. Synthesis & destruction of cyclin -- ubiquination -- proteasomes 2. Inactivation & activation -- Activating/inhibitory Kinases/phosphatase -- Pos feedback rapid activation Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 12 How do cyclin-cdk’s trigger cellular events? S-Cdk triggers DNA replication -- activates replication origins -- blocks reactivation What does activated M-CDK do? 1) 2) 3) 4) Phosphorylates H1 histone (triggering C’some condensation) Disassembly of nuclear lamina Changes behavior of microtubules -- phosphorylates MAPs etc…?? Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 13 How does activated S-Cdk trigger DNA replication? Origin of Replication Complex (ORC) CDC-6 rises during G1 -- helps build replication fork complex -- helicase, polymerase, etc S-CDK activates replication complex -- inhibits ORC Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 14 Figures 18-14 + 18-15 How do checkpoint proteins (i.e.,TSPs) suppress cell division? P53, BRCA1, P21 and Rb are all TSPs -- loss of both alleles necessary Why? P53 can also trigger apoptosis Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 15 What are the mechanisms of apoptosis activation and cellular destruction? Intrinsic activation signals -- cell injury, P53 activation, etc -- lack of survival signal Intrinsic vs extrinsic activation Caspase family of proteases -- activation ‘cascade’ Extrinsic activation signals -- cell-surface receptors (Fas/FasL) -- cellular toxins (Granzymes) Caspase cascade Intrinsic pathway Question 18-10, p 635 Why apoptosis rather than necrosis? Cancer and Cell Cycle Regulation 16