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Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle Why do cells divide? • The continuity of life is based on the reproduction of cells: cell division • Cells divide to: – Reproduce – Renewal – Repair – Replacement – Make new cells Cell Cycle • The cell cycle is the entire life of the cell, including growing and reproducing. Organization of Genetic Material • DNA: our genetic material, our genes • Chromatin: DNA and proteins • Chromosomes: threadlike structures in the nucleus that are made of chromatin • Genome: all of our DNA Chromosome Duplication • Before a cell can divide, chromosomes must duplicate. • Each duplicated chromosome has two identical sister chromatids, attached at a centromere. Phases of the Cell Cycle • Interphase: 90% of the cell’s life, during which growth, protein synthesis, and chromosome duplication occurs. Has 3 sub-phases: • G1 phase: “first gap” the cell grows • S phase: “synthesis” chromosomes duplicate • G2 phase: “second gap” the cell grows some more and prepares for division Phases of the Cell Cycle • The other phase is the Mitotic Phase (M) during which the cell divides. It has 2 subphases: • Mitosis: when the nucleus divides • Cytokinesis: when the cytoplasm and the rest of the cell divides Cell Cycle The Mitotic Spindle • The mitotic spindle is made of microtubules and proteins which help move the chromosomes around. • It is made in the centrosome (an organelle) • Asters are short microtubules that extend out from the centrosome • Kinetochores are where the asters attach to chromosomes The Phases of Mitosis • • • • • • Prophase (Prometaphase) Metaphase Anaphase Telophase Cytokinesis Prophase • Chromatin condenses and can be seen in the microscope Prometaphase • The nuclear membrane breaks up • Microtubules begin to get into place around the chromosomes Metaphase • Longest phase (20 minutes!) • Chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell (metaphase plate) • Kinetochores connect centromeres to spindle poles Anaphase • Shortest phase (2-3 minutes) • Sister chromatids pull apart and begin to move to opposite sides of the cell Telophase • Two new nuclei (daughter nuclei) begin to form • New nuclear membranes begin to form Cytokinesis • The cytoplasm of the parent cells divide to form 2 new daughter cells Cytokinesis in Animals • In animals, a cleavage furrow forms to pinch the cell in two Cytokinesis in Plants • In plant cells, a cell plate made of vesicles filled with cellulose, forms in between the two new cells to make a new cell wall. Binary Fission • Prokaryotes (bacteria and Archea) reproduce by binary fission, meaning “division in half.” • Bacteria have one chromosome, which is a a big circle, which reproduce starting at the origin of replication. • After DNA is duplicated, the plasma membrane pinches inward and a new cell wall grows between the daughter cells. Regulation of the Cell Cycle • The cell cycle is driven by molecular signals present in the cytoplasm, called the cell cycle control system. • Checkpoints in the cell cycle are critical point where the cell is told to “stop” or “go-ahead” • G1 checkpoint: “restriction point” if the cell is told to stop it goes to G0 non-dividing phase (like muscle and nerve cells) Kinases and Cyclins • Kinases are enzymes that active or inactive proteins of the cell cycle • Cyclins are proteins that must be attached to kinases to be active; they are cyclin dependent kinases (Cdks) • MPF “maturationpromotion factor” triggers G2 How cells grow • Cells don’t grow if they are over-crowded, which is called density-dependent inhibition • Most cells are anchorage dependent which means that they must be attached to something to grow • Cancer cells are NEITHER of these things, they are cells growing out of control wherever they want. Cancer • Cancer cells are cells that divide excessively and invade other tissues. • They do not heed the normal signals that regulate the cell cycle. Cancer • When a normal cell becomes cancerous, this is called transformation. • If it stays at the original site, this is a benign tumor. • If it metastasizes, this means it moves to another tissue, which is what malignant tumors do. Cancer Treatment • Radiation: damages cancer cell DNA • Chemotherapy: toxic drugs interfere with the cell cycle of rapidly dividing cancer cells • Surgery: physically cut out the cancer cells