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+ Cell checkpoints and Cancer + Introduction Catastrophic genetic damage can occur if cells progress to the next phase of the cell cycle before the previous phase is properly completed. For example, the attachment of kinetochores to microtubules of the mitotic spindle during metaphase. If anaphase is initiated before both kinetochores of a replicated chromosome become attached to microtubules from opposite spindle poles, daughter cells are produced that have a missing or extra chromosome + The cell cycle proceeds by a defined sequence of events where late events depend upon completion of early events . The aim of the dependency of events is to distribute complete and accurate replicas of the genome to daughter cells. To monitor this dependency, cells are equipped with the checkpoints that are set at various stages of the cell cycle. + Basic info The cell cycle is very basic. It occurs in two phases: Interphase, Mitosis / Cytokinesis. Mitosis an Cytokinesis are two separate parts of one phase. Interphase simply is when the cell is growing and maintaining homeostasis, duplicating its genetic material and prepping for division. Mitosis and Cytokinesis is the splitting of the nucleus and cytoplasm to create two identical cells with identical genetic information. The average human cell divides about every 24 hours. The cell cycle is broken down as the following: Interphase – 90% of the time, mainly in the S phase, and Mitosis and Cytokinesis – 10% of the time. + Basic info The timing and rate of cell division in different parts of an animal or plant are crucial to normal growth, development, and maintenance. The frequency of cellular division varies with the type of cell. The mechanisms that regulate the cell cycle are necessary for general understanding of cell division but also for understanding how cancer cells manage to escape the usual controls. + The cell cycle control system, triggers and coordinates key events in the cell cycle. The cell cycle is regulated at certain checkpoints by internal and external signals. A checkpoint is a stop-and go-ahead signal that regulates the cell cycle. There are three major checkpoints you need to know! + + G1 Checkpoint Known as the restriction point Most important In most cases, if it gets a go ahead here, it will complete the entire cell cycle If it doesn’t get a go ahead, it will stop the cell cycle, and goes into a non-dividing state. These are usually mature nerve and muscle cells, cells that do not divide. Can be “called back” due to external stimuli such as growth factors The decision to commit a new round of cell division occurs when the cell activates cyclin-CDK-dependent transcription which promotes entry into the S phase. + G2 Checkpoint Known as DNA Damage checkpoint. Prevents cells containing damaged DNA from entering mitosis (M) Following the decision to enter the cell cycle and undergo division, the cell goes through S phase, in which it replicates its DNA, and, in most species, G2, in which it undergoes rapid growth and protein synthesis in preparation for mitosis, the process of cell division. Ensures that the cell underwent all of the necessary changes during the S and G2 phases and is ready to divide. + M checkpoint The mitotic spindle checkpoint occurs at the point in metaphase where all the chromosomes should/have aligned at the mitotic plate. The tension that is created by this attachment is what is sensed, which initiates the anaphase entry. The sensing mechanism ensures that the anaphase-promoting complex is free to break down securin, which is a protein, which in turn cuts the cohesins, the protein composite responsible for cohesion of sister chromatids. After the cell has split into its two daughter cells, the cell enters G1. + + Kinases What causes these control molecules: Proteins Protein kinases and Cyclins Cyclin dependent kinases (CDKs) control the various checkpoints that control cell cycle. Different CDKs, control the major steps between different phases of the cell cycle through phosphorylation of cell proteins. A Cdk is an enzyme that adds negatively charged phosphate groups to other molecules in a process called phosphorylation. Through phosphorylation, Cdks signal the cell that it is ready to pass into the next stage of the cell cycle. + Cyclins Cyclins are another class of regulatory proteins. Cyclins bind to Cdks, activating the Cdks to phosphorylate other molecules. Cyclins are named such because they undergo a constant cycle of synthesis and degradation (breakdown) during cell division. When cyclins are synthesized, they act as an activating protein and bind to Cdks forming a cyclin-Cdk complex. This complex then acts as a signal to the cell to pass to the next cell cycle phase. Eventually, the cyclin degrades, deactivating the Cdk, thus signaling exit from a particular phase. There are two classes of cyclins: mitotic cyclins and G1 cyclins. + + Cell cycle and cancer cell cycle checkpoints have been intimately linked with cancer due to their functions regulating genome stability and cell progression, respectively. In cells that undergo very rapid cell division, G1 and G2 can be decreased or even eliminated in cells that undergo very rapid cell division. When cancer develops, however, this orderly process breaks down. As cells become more and more abnormal, old or damaged cells survive when they should die, and new cells form when they are not needed. These extra cells can divide without stopping and may form growths called tumors. + Genetic mutations causing the malfunction or absence of one or more of the regulatory proteins at cell cycle checkpoints can result in the "molecular switch" being turned permanently on, permitting uncontrolled multiplication of the cell, leading to carcinogenesis, or tumor development. part 1 ppt cell cycle part 2 ppt cancer