Top Banner
Cell Cycle, DNA, and Protein Synthesis
29

Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Nov 07, 2014

Download

Education

Fred Phillips

 
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Cell Cycle, DNA, and Protein Synthesis

Page 2: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

The Cell Cycle• We have learned that the basic unit of life is the

cell.• Like all living things, the cell goes through a

cycle of growth and reproduction.• The sequence of growth and division of a cell is

called the Cell Cycle.• Most of the cell’s life is spent in the growth

phase known as interphase – made up of three phases:

G1, S, and G2

• The shortest phase in the cycle is the cell division phase known

as mitosis and cytokinesis.

Page 3: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

T

he C

ell

Cyc

le (s

ee d

iag

ram

on

pag

e 2

28

)

G1 – GAP 1 – Chromosomes are not visible (chromatin)

Cell is rapidly growing and synthesizing proteins for daily functions

S Stage - Synthesis

Chromosomes are replicated to form a pair of sister chromatids connected by a centromere

G2 – Gap 2 - Cell is growing and producing

proteins needed for mitosis

Mitosis - Cell divides the

nucleus followed by cytoplasm

division (cytokinesis)

resulting in two identical

daughter cells

Page 4: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Mitosis

• During mitosis, one parent cell divides into two identical daughter cells.

• All somatic cells (cells other than the sex cells that make eggs and sperm) undergo mitosis.

• There are four phases of mitosis:– Prophase– Metaphase– Anaphase– Telophase

Page 5: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Prophase• This is the first and longest

phase in mitosis.• The nuclear envelope

disappears• Chromatin coils to become visible

chromosomes• The two halves of the doubled

structure are called sister chromatids.

• Sister chromatids are exact copies of each other and are held together by a centromere.

• In animal cells, the centrioles move to opposite ends of the cell and start to form spindle fibers

Page 6: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Metaphase

• The second and shortest phase in mitosis

• The spindle fibers attach to the centromere

• The sister chromatids are then pulled to the middle of the cell and line up on the midline or equator

• One sister chromatid from each pair points to one pole while the other points to the opposite pole

Page 7: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Anaphase

• The centromeres split and the sister chromatids are pulled to opposite poles of the cell

Page 8: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Telophase

• Chromosomes uncoil• Spindle is broken down• Nuclear envelope

reappears• Cytokinesis begins

Page 9: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Cytokinesis

• Cytoplasm is split forming two daughter cells each with its own nucleus and cytoplasmic organelles– In animals: a cleavage

furrow is formed that pinches the two cells apart

– In plants: a cell plate forms between the two new cells to start the formation of the cell wall (this does not occur in animal cells!) Cell

Plate

Page 10: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Name the Phase

Prophase

Prophase Metapha

se

Anaphase

Metaphase

Telophase

Telophase Anapha

se

Page 11: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Controlling the Cell Cycle

• The cell cycle is driven by a chemical control system telling the cell when to turn on and off cell division– Internal signals – cell senses the presence of

enzymes produced within the cell– External signals – cell senses the presence of

chemicals (such as growth factors) produced by other specialized cells

• Cells also respond to physical signals– When cells are packed in too closely, division

is turned off– When cells are not in contact with other cells,

division is turned on

Page 12: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Controlling the Cell Cycle

• The cycle control system is regulated at certain checkpoints

• At each checkpoint, the cell decides if it should go on with division– G1 – makes sure conditions are favorable and

cell is big enough for division– G2 – cell checks for any mistakes in the

copies of DNA– Mitosis – cell makes sure chromosomes and

spindle are arranged properly• Specific stimuli are required to initiate

cell division. Cell division in most animal’s cells is in the “off” position when no stimulus is present

Page 13: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Mitosis Out of Control• Cancer cells are an example of cells that

do not listen to the cell’s control system• Cancer cells keep dividing even though

they may be closely packed together or no growth factor is present.

• Cancer begins as a single cell• This cell is normally found and destroyed by

the body’s immune system. If not, this cell could divide into a mass of identical daughter cancer cells that:– Impair the function of one or more organs –

malignant tumor• Cells can break off, enter the blood and lymph systems and

invade other parts of the body and become new tumors.– Remain at their original site – benign tumor

Page 14: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

DNA• Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) contains the

information for life – all the instructions needed to make proteins (including enzymes)

• A segment of DNA that controls the production of a protein is called a gene. Hundreds of genes together make up a chromosome.

DNA genes chromosomes

• DNA is a polymer made up of a chain of nucleotides

• Each nucleotide has three parts:– simple sugar (deoxyribose)– phosphate group– Nitrogen base (adenine, guanine, thymine, or

cytosine)

Page 15: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

DNA Nucleotide Structure

Page 16: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

DN

A S

tru

ctu

re

Nucleotide

Single ring nitrogen bases always bind with a double ring

nitrogen base:

Adenine to Thymine

Cytosine to Guanine

Page 17: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Nucleotide Sequence

• The DNA of all living things has the same four nitrogen bases.

• They are different due to the different sequences of those bases.– For example, the code ATTGAC would

code for a different protein than TCCAAA

• Because the order of these bases is so important, DNA must carefully replicate itself when the cell divides to ensure an exact copy is passed on to each daughter cell

Page 18: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

DNA Replication• DNA is un zipped and unwound

by the enzyme helicase• The enzyme Polymerase

attaches and reads the DNA• DNA nucleotides find their

compliments on each side of the DNA strand

• New bases keep attaching until two identical molecules of DNA are completed. This is called semi-conservative replication. Replication Forks increase the speed of replication.

• Mitosis would then follow where each daughter cell would be given matching copies of the original DNA

Page 19: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Protein Synthesis

• Flow of genetic information--DNA→RNA→Protein

• DNA holds the code for protein synthesis but it cannot leave the nucleus.

• Protein synthesis is performed at the ribosomes in the cytoplasm

• The cell uses RNA to copy the code from DNA and bring it to the ribosomes

• RNA (ribonucleic acid) has three parts:– Simple sugar (ribose)– Phosphate group– Nitrogen base (adenine, cytosine, guanine, and

uracil)• There is no thymine in RNA – it is replaced with uracil

Page 20: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

RNA Structure

Page 21: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Transcription• Copying the portion of

DNA that carries the code for a protein is called transcription.

• A portion of DNA that codes for a specific protein is unwound

• RNA nucleotides find their compliment

DNA - ATTGCTCCGRNA - UAACGAGGC

• The RNA strand (mRNA) releases from the DNA strand

• mRNA strand is edited and released from the nucleus

Page 22: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Chapter 10Transcription

Page 23: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Translation• Translation is the process

of interpreting mRNA to build a chain of amino acids that make up a protein

• mRNA leaves the nucleus and heads to the ribosomes where translation will occur

• Each sequence of three nucleotides is called a codon.

• Each codon codes for a specific amino acid.

UAA CGA GGCcodo

ncodo

ncodo

n

Page 24: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Translation Steps• Amino acids are brought to the

ribosome by tRNA• There are 20 different tRNA

molecules, one for each type of amino acid

• tRNA anticodons find their compliment codon on the mRNA

mRNA codons – UAA CGA GGC

tRNA atnicodons – AUU GCU CCG

• Peptide bonds forms between the amino acids forming a polypeptide

• Translation stops when a stop codon is reached

tRNA

Page 25: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Translation Steps

Page 26: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Chapter 10Genetic Code• The nearly universal genetic code

identifies the specific amino acids coded for by each three-nucleotide mRNA codon.

The Human Genome: The entire gene sequence of the human genome, the complete genetic content, is now known. Approximately 30,000 genes.

Page 27: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Processes and Code Transfer

• Replication – copies DNA to make another identical double strand of DNA

• Transcription – makes a copy of a section of DNA and creates a single strand of mRNA

• Translation – reads the sequence of mRNA nucleotides to build a protein

Page 28: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Protein Secretion• The polypeptide chain

that is made during translation is sent to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) for any further structural components

• Golgi bodies package the protein and send it to the cell membrane

• The protein is then secreted from the cell and sent where the body needs it

http://courses.washington.edu/conj/cell/secretion.htm

Page 29: Cell Cycle, Dna, And Protein Synthesis Notes New

Mutations

• If the mRNA does not copy the code correctly, the amino acid chain will be altered – this is called a mutation