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Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction
22

Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Dec 27, 2015

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Adelia Hall
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Page 1: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer

Unit: Cell Reproduction

Page 2: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Cell cycle- a repeating cycle ofcellular growth and division duringthe life of an organism.

What’s the result?

• 2 daughter cells genetically identical to the parent cell they came from.

Page 3: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

1.Interphase- composed of G1, S, G2 stages

– This is the longest part of cell cycle. A cell spends 90% of its time in interphase.

2.M= Mitosis = Nuclear division

Page 4: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

G1 Phase - Cell Growth

• In the G1 phase, the cell increases in size due to rapid growth.

• Cells also synthesize new proteins and organelles.

Page 5: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

S Phase: DNA Replication

– In the S (or synthesis) phase, new DNA is synthesized when the chromosomes are replicated.

– The cell has DOUBLE the genetic material at this point (sister chromatids rather than chromosomes)

Page 6: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

G2 Phase: Preparing for Cell Division

– In the G2 phase, growth continues.

– The cell prepares for cell division by producing organelles and molecules required for cell division.

Page 7: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

M Phase

– In eukaryotes, cell division occurs in two stages: mitosis and cytokinesis.

– Mitosis is the division of the cell nucleus.

– Cytokinesis is the division of the cytoplasm.

Page 8: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Take 2 minutes to summarize what you havelearned regarding the steps of the cell cycle

Discuss with your shoulder partner-

What do you understand well?

What is a little confusing?

Page 9: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Regulating the Cell Cycle • The cell cycle has key checkpoints at which feedback can trigger the next phase of the cell cycle ( like a green light).

• There are also feedback signals that can delay the passage to the next phase (red light). This allows the current phase to be completed.

•  In other words, checkpoints CONTROL the rate of cell division

         

Page 10: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

These checkpoints are actually controlled by

a family of proteins called cyclins.

• Their job is to regulate the timing of the cell cycle in eukaryotic cells.

Page 11: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Checkpoints Cell Growth (G1) checkpoint – This checkpoint

makes the decision of whether or not the cellwill divide.

• If conditions are favorable, synthesis phase (S phase) begins and the cells DNA is copied.

If conditions are NOT favorable, the cell will stopdivision at this checkpoint.  

      

Page 12: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Checkpoints (continued)

DNA synthesis checkpoint (G2) – DNA is checked

by DNA repair enzymes. If this checkpoint ispassed, proteins help to trigger mitosis. Mitosis checkpoint ~ this checkpoint triggersthe end of mitosis. It indicates that thenew cell is in the initial growth phase (G1)

Page 13: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

What do you think?

Do cells continue going through the cell cycle

forever………………………..????????????????

Page 14: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Apoptosis

Definition- the process of programmed cell death.

This is important for development, homeostasis and elimination of pathogens and tumor cells

Example: the foot of a mouse is shaped the way it is partly because the toes undergo apoptosis during tissue development.

Page 15: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Take 2 minutes to summarize what you havelearned regarding how the cell cycle isRegulated

Discuss with your shoulder partner-

What do you understand well?

What is a little confusing?

Page 16: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

When Control is LostSometimes, there may be a mutation on one of thegenes that regulates cell growth and division.

• This means that the proteins necessary to monitor cell growth are absent.

Cancer - is a disorder in which body cells lose the ability to control cell growth.

     

Page 17: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Cancer cells do not respond to the body’scontrol mechanisms.

They may cause cell division to either speed up,or to slow down.

• Either way, this is damaging to the organism

Page 18: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

What causes mutations (defects in genes) that can lead to cancer?

1. Mutations can arise spontaneously; meaning that normal cells become cancer cells for no apparent reason.

2. Other sources of gene defects are smoking tobacco, radiation exposure, and viral infection.

Page 19: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

What happens in your body if a cell becomes cancerous?

Normally, your body’s immune cells destroycancer cells.

• Sometimes cancer cells can go undetected. These cells can continue to grow and divide and eventually will form a tumor.

Tumor ~ a mass of cancer cells within otherwisehealthy tissue.

Page 20: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Types of Tumors

1. Benign tumors ~ Tumors formed from a mass of cells that remain at the original site that cancerous growth began.

2. Malignant tumor ~ tumors that form if cancer cells spread to and destroy healthy neighboring tissues and other parts of the body.

Metastasis ~ the spread of cancer cells beyond their original site.

 

Page 21: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Tumor treatment  1. Surgical removal (for localized tumors)2. Chemotherapy ( poisonous chemicals) 3. Targeted radiation (high-energy radiation)

Chemotherapy and radiation are especiallyharmful to actively dividing cells (bothcancerous and normal)

Most cancer drugs interfere with the cell cycleof cancer cells.

Page 22: Lecture #3 The Cell Cycle & Cancer Unit: Cell Reproduction.

Take 2 minutes to summarize what you

have learned regarding what happens

when control of cell division is ‘lost’

Discuss with your shoulder partner-

What do you understand well?

What is a little confusing?