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Cell cycle and cell programmed death

Cell cycle and cell programmed death. Haixu Tang School of Informatics. The cell cycle. The events of eucaryotic cell division. The phases of the cell cycle. A comparison of the cell cycles of fission yeasts and budding yeasts. The behavior of a temperature-sensitive cdc mutant.

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Cell cycle and cell programmed death

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  1. Cell cycle and cell programmed death Haixu Tang School of Informatics

  2. The cell cycle

  3. The events of eucaryotic cell division

  4. The phases of the cell cycle

  5. A comparison of the cell cycles of fission yeasts and budding yeasts

  6. The behavior of a temperature-sensitive cdc mutant

  7. The Cell-Cycle Control System Can Be Analyzed Biochemically in Animal Embryos

  8. The Cell-Cycle Control System of Mammals Can Be Studied in Culture

  9. Labeling S-phase cells

  10. FACS: fluorescence-activated cell sorter

  11. The control of the cell cycle

  12. Basic control system • A clock, or timer, that turns on each event at a specific time, thus providing a fixed amount of time for the completion of each event. • A mechanism for initiating events in the correct order; entry into mitosis, for example, must always come after DNA replication. • A mechanism to ensure that each event is triggered only once per cycle. • Binary (on/off) switches that trigger events in a complete, irreversible fashion. It would clearly be disastrous, for example, if events like chromosome condensation or nuclear envelope breakdown were initiated but not completed. • Robustness: backup mechanisms to ensure that the cycle can work properly even when parts of the system malfunction. • Adaptability, so that the system's behavior can be modified to suit specific cell types or environmental conditions.

  13. The Control System Can Arrest the Cell Cycle at Specific Checkpoints

  14. Checkpoints Generally Operate Through Negative Intracellular Signals • The Cell-Cycle Control System Is Based on Cyclically Activated Protein Kinases • Cdk Activity Can Be Suppressed Both by Inhibitory Phosphorylation and by Inhibitory Proteins • The Cell-Cycle Control System Depends on Cyclical Proteolysis • Cell-Cycle Control Also Depends on Transcriptional Regulation

  15. Two key components of the cell-cycle control system • G1/S-cyclins bind Cdks at the end of G1 and commit the cell to DNA replication. • S-cyclins bind Cdks during S phase and are required for the initiation of DNA replication. • M-cyclins promote the events of mitosis. • G1-cyclins, helps promote passage through Start or the restriction point in late G1.

  16. Core of the cell-cycle control system

  17. The structural basis of Cdk activation

  18. The regulation of Cdk activity

  19. The inhibition of a cyclin-Cdk complex by a CKI

  20. The control of proteolysis

  21. Rereplication block.

  22. The initiation of DNA replication once per cell cycle

  23. The activation of M-Cdk

  24. The triggering of sister-chromatid separation by the APC

  25. The creation of a G1 phase

  26. The control of G1 progression

  27. How DNA damage arrests the cell cycle?

  28. An overview of the cell-cycle control system

  29. Cell death

  30. The caspase cascade involved in apoptosis

  31. Intracellular Regulators of the Cell Death Program • The Bcl-2 family • IAP (inhibitor of apoptosis) family

  32. Induction of apoptosis by either extracellular or intracellular stimuli

  33. The extracellular signal molecules • Mitogens, which stimulate cell division, primarily by relieving intracellular negative controls that otherwise block progress through the cell cycle. • Growth factors, which stimulate cell growth (an increase in cell mass) by promoting the synthesis of proteins and other macromolecules and by inhibiting their degradation. • Survival factors, which promote cell survival by suppressing apoptosis

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