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THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

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THE CELL CYCLE THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Its Lifespan Implication Implication
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Page 1: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

THE CELL CYCLETHE CELL CYCLE

IPMAT Regulation & IPMAT Regulation &

Its Lifespan ImplicationIts Lifespan Implication

Page 2: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Why Do Cells Divide?Why Do Cells Divide?

Page 3: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Why Do Cells Divide?Why Do Cells Divide?

ReproductionReproduction– Binary Fission in bacteria

Tissue GrowthTissue Growth– Growth in multicellular organisms = more

cells not larger cells Tissue RepairTissue Repair Maintain High Surface Area:VolumeMaintain High Surface Area:Volume

– High volume = low efficiency

Page 4: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Parts in the Process:Parts in the Process: ChromosomesChromosomes

http://anatomy.iupui.edu/courses/histo_D502/D502f04/lecture.f04/cell.f04/cellf04.html http://mbbnet.umn.edu/icons/chromosome.jpeg

Page 5: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Parts in the Process:Parts in the Process: Centrioles & The MTOCCentrioles & The MTOC

http://sparkleberrysprings.com/v-web/b2/images/lotc/centriole14.jpg

Page 6: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Parts in the Process:Parts in the Process: Spindle Fibers & KinetochoresSpindle Fibers & Kinetochores

http://www.nikonsmallworld.com/gallery.php?grouping=year&year=2004&imagepos=18

Page 7: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Parts in the ProcessParts in the Process CentriolesCentrioles

– animal cells only– MT– spindle fiber organization

Centrosomes Centrosomes – plant & animal cells– AKA MTOC’s

www.cellsalive.com

http://osumolgen.siteturbine.com/sites/osumolgen/images/met3.jpg

Page 8: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Parts in the ProcessParts in the Process

ChromosomesChromosomes– Super-coiled DNA – centromeres

Spindle FibersSpindle Fibers– MT’s attached to centromeres @

kinetochore– Tracks for chromosome movement toward

centrioles @ poles

Page 9: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

http://www2.geneticsolutions.com/PageReq?id=3844:1873

Page 10: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

http://www2.geneticsolutions.com/PageReq?id=3844:1873

Page 11: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.
Page 12: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

The Cell CycleThe Cell Cycle

IInterphase can be divided into 3 main substages: – GG11 – Gap 1 - period of growth

– SS – Synthesis – DNA is copied (synthesized)

– GG22 – Gap 2 – preparation for division

Page 13: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

The Cell CycleThe Cell Cycle (continued) Following GG22 of IInterphase, mitosis

(M-phase) carries out division:– PProphase– MMetaphase– AAnaphase – TTelophase & Cytokinesis http://www.biology.iupui.edu/biocourses/

N100/2k4ch8mitosisnotes.html

Page 14: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

ProphaseProphase Centrosomes to poles Nuclear membrane disappears Chromatin condenses to form

chromosomes

http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/micro/gallery/mitosis/lateprophase.html http://www.dundee.ac.uk/biocentre/GRE%20Scientific%20images/pages/Prophase.htm

Page 15: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

MetaphaseMetaphase Chromosomes in middle of cell Spindle fibers form Kinetochores attach to centromeres of

each chromatid

http://www.brown.edu/Courses/BI0020_Miller/images/metaphase-1.jpg http://www.pc.vccs.edu/biology-labmanual/lab7mitmei/whitefishmeta.jpg

Page 16: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

AnaphaseAnaphase Sister chromatids separate Chromatids move to poles using

retreating spindle fibers (D.I.)

http://micro.magnet.fsu.edu/micro/gallery/mitosis/earlyanaphase.html http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/3/38/300px-Anaphase-flourescent.jpg

Page 17: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Telophase & CytokinesisTelophase & Cytokinesis TelophaseTelophase complete division of nucleus

– Spindle fibers disappear– Nuclear membranes reappear

CytokinesisCytokinesis complete division of cytoplasm– Cleavage furrow in animals– Cell plate in plants

http://iknow.net/CDROMs/cell_cdrom/index.html

Plant Animation

Animal Mitosis

Page 18: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

http://www.cbp.pitt.edu/faculty/yong_wan/index.html

Page 19: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Asymmetric DivisionAsymmetric Division Specialization of stem cells New daughter cells not identical

http://labshelf.com/stem-cells-treatments-research.html http://labshelf.com/stem-cells-treatments-research.html

Page 20: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Regulation of Cell CycleRegulation of Cell Cycle G0

Checkpoints Apoptosis

– Damage Prevention– Developmental

Oncogenes– Mitosis accelerators

Tumor Suppressor Genes– Mitosis brakes

Page 21: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

GG00 – Exit From the Cell Cycle – Exit From the Cell Cycle temporary (wbc’s) or permanent (nerve) Cancer cells do not ever enter G0

Page 22: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Checkpoints in the Cell CycleCheckpoints in the Cell Cycle

GG11, SS, and MM occur when cyclinscyclins (proteins) bind & activate kinaseskinases.

Kinases phosphorylate compounds necessary for division.

kinases blocked if damage detected @ GG11, SS, or MM checkpoints.

Page 23: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/C/CellCycle.html

p53p53

ATMATM

MADMAD

Page 24: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

DNA Damage DetectionDNA Damage Detection GG11

– p53p53, a tumor suppressor, checks for damage before DNA replication

– If damage cannot be repaired, p53 sends cell to to die so it cannot lead to cancer

– P53 mutations implicated in > ½ of all human cancers SS

– ATMATM detects DNA damage, helps p53 send irreparably damaged cells to death, & maintains telomere length

MM– MADMAD stops mitosis if problems w/ microtubles in spindle

fiber formation

Page 25: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

APOPTOSISAPOPTOSIS

Programmed Cell Death

Page 26: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

DefinitionDefinition Mechanism of normal, controlled death

by:– DNA fragmentation– Cytoplasm shrinkage– Membrane blebbing

Cellular “suicide” No spillage or damage to nearby cells No inflammatory responsehttp://www.sgul.ac.uk/depts/immunology/~dash/apoptosis/apoptosisvideo.html

Page 27: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Is All Cell Death Equal?Is All Cell Death Equal?

Necrosis– Messy cell death usually due to injury– Cellular “homicide”– Cell contents come spilling out leading to an

inflammatory response. • Swelling• Redness• Fever

Page 28: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.
Page 29: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Why Suicide?Why Suicide?

Development– Mouse paws (and human hands) use cell

death to form digits.

Page 30: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.
Page 31: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Death As A Necessity For LifeDeath As A Necessity For Life

Immune system cells• Virally infected cells• Immune cells that don’t recognize “self”• Removal of cytotoxic T cells after infection is

conquered

DNA damaged cells• Sent to their death by p53 to prevent tumors

Page 32: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Disorders InvolvedDisorders Involved

Neurological disorders such as Huntington’s, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases

• Too much apoptosis

Cancer• Not enough apoptosis

Cell Division Cell Death

Page 33: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Genes in CancerGenes in Cancer OncogenesOncogenes

– Genes known to speed up mitosis– Mitosis accelerators when ON

(phosphorylation)– Cancer results if ON when should be OFF

Tumor Suppressor GenesTumor Suppressor Genes– Mitosis brakes– Tumors result if OFF when should be ON

Page 34: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Can a Cell Divide Forever?Can a Cell Divide Forever?

Normal CellsNormal Cells – NONO– TelomeresTelomeres, buffer zones @ tips of each

chromosome, get shorter w/ each division– Cells die when telomeres gone

• EX: Aging effects are due to dead cells that can no longer be replaced

Page 35: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

Can a Cell Divide Forever?Can a Cell Divide Forever? Cancer CellsCancer Cells – YESYES

– Telomerase is ON• Enzyme repairs telomeres after each division

Embryonic Stem CellsEmbryonic Stem Cells – YESYES– Fountain of Youth lies in harnessing anti-

aging powers of telomerase w/o risk of cancer

NO EASY TASKNO EASY TASK

Page 36: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

www.hybridmedicalanimation.com http://www.ellisonfoundation.org/images/pfbs/p018_telomeres.jpg

Page 37: THE CELL CYCLE IPMAT Regulation & Its Lifespan Implication.

The Cell CycleThe Cell Cycle

http://bhs.smuhsd.org/bhsnew/academicprog/science/vaughn/Student%20Projects/Paul%20&%20Marcus/Cell_Replication.html


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