Regulation of Cell Division

Coordination of cell division

§  Multicellular organism

–  Need to ______across different ______parts of organism

–  Critical for ______growth, ______and ______

•  Coordinate timing of ______
•  Coordinate rates of ______
•  Not all cells can have the same ______

Frequency of cell division

§  Frequency of cell division ______with cell type

–  Embryo

·  Cell cycle ______

–  Skin cells

•  Divide ______throughout life
•  ______cycle

–  Liver cells

•  Retain ______to divide, but keep it in ______
•  Divide once every ______

–  Mature nerve cells and muscle cells

•  ______at all after maturity
•  Permanently in ______

Overview of Cell Cycle Control

§  Two ______points in cell cycle

–  Replication of ______

–  Separation of ______

§  Checkpoints

§  Process is ______and possibly ______

Checkpoint control system

§  Checkpoints

–  Cell cycle controlled by ______chemical signals at ______points

–  Signals indicate if ______have been completed correctly

§  3 major checkpoints

–  ______

•  Can ______begin?

–  ______

•  Has ______been completed correctly?
•  Commitment to ______

–  ______checkpoint

•  Are all ______attached to spindle?
•  Can ______separate correctly?

G1/S Checkpoint

§  G1/S checkpoint is most ______

–  ______decision point

•  ______point

§  If cell receives go signal, it ______

·  ______signals: cell growth (size), cell nutrition

·  ______signals: growth factors

§  If cell does not receive go signal, cell ______cycle and switches to ______phase

–  ______, working state

GO phase

§  ______state

§  ______human cells in GO phase

§  Liver cells

–  In GO phase but can be ______to cell cycle by external cues

§  Nerve and muscle cells

–  ______specialized

–  ______in GO phase and can ______divide

Activation of cell division

§  How do cells know when to divide?

–  ______signals

•  Chemical signals in ______give cue

•  Signals usually mean ______

–  ______
–  ______

Go ahead signals

§  Protein Signals that promote ______

–  ______signals

–  ______factors

–  ______signals

•  ______factors

§  Primary mechanism of control

–  ______

•  ______enzymes

•  either activates or ______cell signals

Cell Cycle Signals

§  Cell Cycle Controls

–  ______

•  ______proteins

•  ______cycle in the cell

–  ______

•  Cyclin dependent kinases

•  Phosphorylates ______proteins

•  ______or ______proteins

–  ______

•  Triggers passage through different stages of ______

Cyclins and Cdks

§  Interaction of ______and different______triggers the stages of the cell cycle

Cyclin and cyclin dependent kinases

§  ______drive cell from one phase to next in cell cycle

§  Proper regulation of cell cycle is so key to life that the genes for these regulatory proteins have been ______through evolution

§  The genes are basically the same in ______

External Signals

§  ______factors

–  Coordination between ______

–  Protein signals released by ______that stimulate other cells to divide

•  ______inhibition

–  ______cells stop dividing
–  Each cell binds a bit of growth ______
–  Not enough left to ______cell division

•  ______dependence

–  To divide cells must be attached to a ______

--______receptors

Example of a Growth Factor

§  Platelet Derived Growth Factor (PDGF)

–  Made by ______(blood cells)

–  Binding of PDGF to cell ______stimulates ______(connective tissue) cell division

•  ______wounds

Growth Factors and Cancer

§  ______can create cancers

–  Proto-oncogenes

–  normally activates ______

·  ______factor genes

·  Become ______(cancer causing) when ______

–  If switched ______can cause cancer

–  Example: ______(activates ______)

§  ______genes

–  ______cell division

–  If switched ______can cause cancer

–  Example: ______

Cancer and cell growth

§  Cancer is essentially a ______of cell division ______

–  ______cell division

§  What control is lost?

–  ______stops

–  Gene ______plays a key role in ______restriction point

•  P53 protein halts cell division if it detects ______

--Options:

–  Stimulates ______to fix DNA
–  Forces cell into GO ______
–  Keeps cell in ______arrest
–  Causes ______of damaged cell

–  ______cancers have to shut down p53 activity

Development of Cancer

§  Cancer develops only after a cell experiences ~ ______(hits)

–  ______growth

•  Turn ______growth promoter genes

–  Ignore ______

•  Turn ______tumor supressor genes

–  Escape ______

•  Turn ______suicide genes

–  Immortality = ______

•  Turn ______chromosome maintenance genes

–  Promotes ______

•  Turn ______blood vessel growth genes

–  Overcome ______dependence

•  Turn ______touch censor gene

What causes these hits?

Mutations in cells can be triggered by:

§  ______

§  ______exposure

§  ______exposure

§  ______

§  ______

§  ______

§  ______

§  ______

Tumors

§  Mass of ______

§  ______tumor

–  Abnormal cells ______at original site as a ______

•  ______has halted cell divisions

–  Most do not cause serious problems and can be removed by ______

§  ______tumors

–  Cells ______original site

•  Lose attachment to nearby ______

•  Carried by ______system to other tissue

•  Start more tumors = ______

–  Impair functions of organs ______body

Traditional treatments for cancers

§  Treatments target ______cells

–  High energy ______

•  ______dividing cells

--Chemotherapy

·  Stop ______

·  Stop ______

·  Stop ______

New Miracle Drugs

§  Drugs targeting ______(enzymes) found only in ______cells

§  Gleevec

–  Treatment for ______(CML) and ______(GIST)

–  1st successful ______

AP Biology McClure-Ottmers

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