Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle
Lecture Outline
Overview: The Key Roles of
Cell Division
·
The
ability of organisms to reproduce their kind is the one characteristic that
best distinguishes living things from nonliving matter.
·
The
continuity of life is based on the reproduction of cells, or cell division.
Cell
division functions in reproduction, growth, and repair.
·
The
division of a unicellular organism reproduces an entire organism, increasing
the population.
·
Cell
division on a larger scale can produce progeny for some multicellular
organisms.
°
This
includes organisms that can grow by cuttings.
·
Cell
division enables a multicellular organism to develop from a single fertilized
egg or zygote.
·
In
a multicellular organism, cell division functions to repair and renew cells
that die from normal wear and tear or accidents.
·
Cell
division is part of the cell cycle, the life of a cell from its origin in the
division of a parent cell until its own division into two.
Concept 12.1 Cell division results in genetically
identical daughter cells
·
Cell
division requires the distribution of identical genetic material—DNA—to two
daughter cells.
·
What
is remarkable is the fidelity with which DNA is passed along, without dilution,
from one generation to the next.
·
A
dividing cell duplicates its DNA, allocates the two copies to opposite ends of
the cell, and then splits into two daughter cells.
·
A
cell’s genetic information, packaged as DNA, is called its genome.
°
In
prokaryotes, the genome is often a single long DNA molecule.
°
In
eukaryotes, the genome consists of several DNA molecules.
·
A
human cell must duplicate about 2 m of DNA and separate the two copies such
that each daughter cell ends up with a complete genome.
·
DNA
molecules are packaged into chromosomes.
°
Every
eukaryotic species has a characteristic number of chromosomes in each cell
nucleus.
§
Human
somatic cells (body cells) have 46 chromosomes, made up of two sets of 23 (one
from each parent).
§
Human
gametes (sperm or eggs) have one set of 23 chromosomes, half the number in a
somatic cell.
·
Eukaryotic
chromosomes are made of chromatin, a
complex of DNA and associated protein.
°
Each
single chromosome contains one long, linear DNA molecule carrying hundreds or
thousands of genes, the units that specify an organism’s inherited traits.
·
The
associated proteins maintain the structure of the chromosome and help control
gene activity.
·
When
a cell is not dividing, each chromosome is in the form of a long, thin
chromatin fiber.
·
Before
cell division, chromatin condenses, coiling and folding to make a smaller
package.
·
Each
duplicated chromosome consists of two sister
chromatids, which contain identical copies of the chromosome’s DNA.
°
The
chromatids are initially attached by adhesive proteins along their lengths.
°
As
the chromosomes condense, the region where the chromatids connect shrinks to a
narrow area, the centromere.
·
Later
in cell division, the sister chromatids are pulled apart and repackaged into
two new nuclei at opposite ends of the parent cell.
°
Once
the sister chromatids separate, they are considered individual chromosomes.
·
Mitosis, the formation of the two
daughter nuclei, is usually followed by division of the cytoplasm, cytokinesis.
·
These
processes start with one cell and produce two cells that are genetically
identical to the original parent cell.
°
Each
of us inherited 23 chromosomes from each parent: one set in an egg and one set
in sperm.
°
The
fertilized egg, or zygote, underwent cycles of mitosis and cytokinesis to
produce a fully developed multicellular human made up of 200 trillion somatic cells.
°
These
processes continue every day to replace dead and damaged cells.
°
Essentially,
these processes produce clones—cells with identical genetic information.
·
In
contrast, gametes (eggs or sperm) are produced only in gonads (ovaries or
testes) by a variation of cell division called meiosis.
°
Meiosis
yields four nonidentical daughter cells, each with half the chromosomes of the
parent.
°
In
humans, meiosis reduces the number of chromosomes from 46 to 23.
°
Fertilization
fuses two gametes together and doubles the number of chromosomes to 46 again.
Concept 12.2 The mitotic phase alternates with
interphase in the cell cycle
·
The
mitotic (M) phase of the cell cycle
alternates with the much longer interphase.
°
The
M phase includes mitosis and cytokinesis.
°
Interphase
accounts for 90% of the cell cycle.
·
During
interphase, the cell grows by producing proteins and cytoplasmic organelles,
copies its chromosomes, and prepares for cell division.
·
Interphase
has three subphases: the G1
phase (“first gap”), the S phase
(“synthesis”), and the G2
phase (“second gap”).
°
During
all three subphases, the cell grows by producing proteins and cytoplasmic
organelles such as mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum.
°
However,
chromosomes are duplicated only during the S phase.
·
The
daughter cells may then repeat the cycle.
·
A
typical human cell might divide once every 24 hours.
°
Of
this time, the M phase would last less than an hour, while the S phase might
take 10–12 hours, or half the cycle.
°
The
rest of the time would be divided between the G1 and G2
phases.
°
The
G1 phase varies most in length from cell to cell.
·
Mitosis
is a continuum of changes.
·
For
convenience, mitosis is usually broken into five subphases: prophase, prometaphase, metaphase,
anaphase, and telophase.
·
In
late interphase, the chromosomes have been duplicated but are not condensed.
°
A
nuclear membrane bounds the nucleus, which contains one or more nucleoli.
°
The
centrosome has replicated to form two centrosomes.
°
In
animal cells, each centrosome features two centrioles.
·
In
prophase, the chromosomes are tightly coiled, with sister chromatids joined
together.
°
The
nucleoli disappear.
°
The
mitotic spindle begins to form.
§
It
is composed of centrosomes and the microtubules that extend from them.
°
The
radial arrays of shorter microtubules that extend from the centrosomes are
called asters.
°
The
centrosomes move away from each other, apparently propelled by lengthening
microtubules.
·
During
prometaphase, the nuclear envelope fragments, and microtubules from the spindle
interact with the condensed chromosomes.
°
Each
of the two chromatids of a chromosome has a kinetochore, a specialized protein structure located at the
centromere.
°
Kinetochore
microtubules from each pole attach to one of two kinetochores.
°
Nonkinetochore
microtubules interact with those from opposite ends of the spindle.
·
The
spindle fibers push the sister chromatids until they are all arranged at the metaphase plate, an imaginary plane
equidistant from the poles, defining metaphase.
·
At
anaphase, the centromeres divide, separating the sister chromatids.
°
Each
is now pulled toward the pole to which it is attached by spindle fibers.
°
By
the end, the two poles have equivalent collections of chromosomes.
·
At
telophase, daughter nuclei begin to form at the two poles.
°
Nuclear
envelopes arise from the fragments of the parent cell’s nuclear envelope and
other portions of the endomembrane system.
°
The
chromosomes become less tightly coiled.
·
Cytokinesis,
division of the cytoplasm, is usually well underway by late telophase.
°
In
animal cells, cytokinesis involves the formation of a cleavage furrow, which
pinches the cell in two.
°
In
plant cells, vesicles derived from the Golgi apparatus produce a cell plate at
the middle of the cell.
The mitotic spindle distributes chromosomes to
daughter cells: a closer look.
·
The
mitotic spindle, fibers composed of
microtubules and associated proteins, is a major driving force in mitosis.
·
As
the spindle assembles during prophase, the elements come from partial
disassembly of the cytoskeleton.
·
The
spindle fibers elongate by incorporating more subunits of the protein tubulin.
·
Assembly
of the spindle microtubules starts in the centrosome.
°
The
centrosome (microtubule-organizing
center) is a nonmembranous organelle that organizes the cell’s
microtubules.
°
In
animal cells, the centrosome has a pair of centrioles at the center, but the
centrioles are not essential for cell division.
·
During
interphase, the single centrosome replicates to form two centrosomes.
·
As
mitosis starts, the two centrosomes are located near the nucleus.
°
As
the spindle microtubules grow from them, the centrioles are pushed apart.
°
By
the end of prometaphase, they are at opposite ends of the cell.
·
An
aster, a radial array of short
microtubules, extends from each centrosome.
·
The
spindle includes the centrosomes, the spindle microtubules, and the asters.
·
Each
sister chromatid has a kinetochore
of proteins and chromosomal DNA at the centromere.
°
The
kinetochores of the joined sister chromatids face in opposite directions.
·
During
prometaphase, some spindle microtubules (called kinetochore microtubules)
attach to the kinetochores.
·
When
a chromosome’s kinetochore is “captured” by microtubules, the chromosome moves
toward the pole from which those microtubules come.
·
When
microtubules attach to the other pole, this movement stops and a tug-of-war
ensues.
·
Eventually,
the chromosome settles midway between the two poles of the cell, on the metaphase plate.
·
Nonkinetochore
microtubules from opposite poles overlap and interact with each other.
·
By
metaphase, the microtubules of the asters have grown and are in contact with
the plasma membrane.
·
The
spindle is now complete.
·
Anaphase
commences when the proteins holding the sister chromatids together are
inactivated.
°
Once
the chromosomes are separate, full-fledged chromosomes, they move toward
opposite poles of the cell.
·
How
do the kinetochore microtubules function into the poleward movement of
chromosomes?
·
One
hypothesis is that the chromosomes are “reeled in” by the shortening of
microtubules at the spindle poles.
·
Experimental
evidence supports the hypothesis that motor proteins on the kinetochore “walk”
the attached chromosome along the microtubule toward the nearest pole.
°
Meanwhile,
the excess microtubule sections depolymerize at their kinetochore ends.
·
What
is the function of the nonkinetochore
microtubules?
·
Nonkinetochore
microtubules are responsible for lengthening the cell along the axis defined by
the poles.
°
These
microtubules interdigitate and overlap across the metaphase plate.
°
During
anaphase, the area of overlap is reduced as motor proteins attached to the
microtubules walk them away from one another, using energy from ATP.
°
As
microtubules push apart, the microtubules lengthen by the addition of new
tubulin monomers to their overlapping ends, allowing continued overlap.
Cytokinesis divides the cytoplasm: a closer
look.
·
Cytokinesis,
division of the cytoplasm, typically follows mitosis.
·
In
animal cells, cytokinesis occurs by a process called cleavage.
·
The
first sign of cleavage is the appearance of a cleavage furrow in the cell surface near the old metaphase plate.
·
On
the cytoplasmic side of the cleavage furrow is a contractile ring of actin
microfilaments associated with molecules of the motor protein myosin.
°
Contraction
of the ring pinches the cell in two.
·
Cytokinesis
in plants, which have cell walls, involves a completely different mechanism.
·
During
telophase, vesicles from the Golgi coalesce at the metaphase plate, forming a cell plate.
°
The
plate enlarges until its membranes fuse with the plasma membrane at the
perimeter.
°
The
contents of the vesicles form new cell wall material between the daughter
cells.
Mitosis in eukaryotes may have evolved from
binary fission in bacteria.
·
Prokaryotes
reproduce by binary fission, not
mitosis.
·
Most
bacterial genes are located on a single bacterial
chromosome that consists of a circular DNA molecule and associated
proteins.
·
While
bacteria are smaller and simpler than eukaryotic cells, they still have large
amounts of DNA that must be copied and distributed equally to two daughter
cells.
·
The
circular bacterial chromosome is highly folded and coiled in the cell.
·
In
binary fission, chromosome replication begins at one point in the circular
chromosome, the origin of replication
site, producing two origins.
°
As
the chromosome continues to replicate, one origin moves toward each end of the
cell.
°
While
the chromosome is replicating, the cell elongates.
°
When
replication is complete, its plasma membrane grows inward to divide the parent
cell into two daughter cells, each with a complete genome.
·
Researchers
have developed methods to allow them to observe the movement of bacterial
chromosomes.
°
The
movement is similar to the poleward movements of the centromere regions of
eukaryotic chromosomes.
°
However,
bacterial chromosomes lack visible mitotic spindles or even microtubules.
·
The
mechanism behind the movement of the bacterial chromosome is becoming clearer
but is still not fully understood.
°
Several
proteins have been identified and play important roles.
·
How
did mitosis evolve?
°
There
is evidence that mitosis had its origins in bacterial binary fission.
°
Some
of the proteins involved in binary fission are related to eukaryotic proteins.
°
Two
of these are related to eukaryotic tubulin and actin proteins.
·
As
eukaryotes evolved, the ancestral process of binary fission gave rise to
mitosis.
·
Possible
intermediate evolutionary steps are seen in the division of two types of
unicellular algae.
°
In
dinoflagellates, replicated chromosomes are attached to the nuclear envelope.
°
In
diatoms, the spindle develops within the nucleus.
·
In
most eukaryotic cells, the nuclear envelope breaks down and a spindle separates
the chromosomes.
Concept 12.3 The cell cycle is regulated by a molecular control
system
·
The
timing and rates of cell division in different parts of an animal or plant are
crucial for normal growth, development, and maintenance.
·
The
frequency of cell division varies with cell type.
°
Some
human cells divide frequently throughout life (skin cells).
°
Others
have the ability to divide, but keep it in reserve (liver cells).
°
Mature
nerve and muscle cells do not appear to divide at all after maturity.
·
Investigation
of the molecular mechanisms regulating these differences provide important
insights into the operation of normal cells, and may also explain cancer cells
escape controls.
Cytoplasmic signals drive the cell cycle.
·
The
cell cycle appears to be driven by specific chemical signals present in the
cytoplasm.
·
Some
of the initial evidence for this hypothesis came from experiments in which
cultured mammalian cells at different phases of the cell cycle were fused to
form a single cell with two nuclei.
°
Fusion
of an S phase cell and a G1 phase cell induces the G1
nucleus to start S phase.
§
This
suggests that chemicals present in the S phase nucleus stimulated the fused
cell.
°
Fusion
of a cell in mitosis (M phase) with one in interphase (even G1
phase) induces the second cell to enter mitosis.
·
The
sequential events of the cell cycle are directed by a distinct cell cycle control system.
°
Cyclically
operating molecules trigger and coordinate key events in the cell cycle.
°
The
control cycle has a built-in clock, but it is also regulated by external
adjustments and internal controls.
·
A
checkpoint in the cell cycle is a
critical control point where stop and go-ahead signals regulate the cycle.
°
The
signals are transmitted within the cell by signal transduction pathways.
°
Animal
cells generally have built-in stop signals that halt the cell cycle at
checkpoints until overridden by go-ahead signals.
°
Many
signals registered at checkpoints come from cellular surveillance mechanisms.
°
These
indicate whether key cellular processes have been completed correctly.
°
Checkpoints
also register signals from outside the cell.
·
Three
major checkpoints are found in the G1, G2, and M phases.
·
For
many cells, the G1 checkpoint, the “restriction point” in mammalian
cells, is the most important.
°
If
the cell receives a go-ahead signal at the G1 checkpoint, it usually
completes the cell cycle and divides.
°
If
it does not receive a go-ahead signal, the cell exits the cycle and switches to
a nondividing state, the G0
phase.
§
Most
cells in the human body are in this phase.
§
Liver
cells can be “called back” to the cell cycle by external cues, such as growth
factors released during injury.
§
Highly
specialized nerve and muscle cells never divide.
·
Rhythmic
fluctuations in the abundance and activity of cell cycle control molecules pace
the events of the cell cycle.
°
These
regulatory molecules include protein kinases that activate or deactivate other
proteins by phosphorylating them.
·
These
kinases are present in constant amounts but require attachment of a second
protein, a cyclin, to become
activated.
°
Levels
of cyclin proteins fluctuate cyclically.
°
Because
of the requirement for binding of a cyclin, the kinases are called cyclin-dependent kinases, or Cdks.
·
Cyclin
levels rise sharply throughout interphase, and then fall abruptly during
mitosis.
·
Peaks
in the activity of one cyclin-Cdk complex, MPF,
correspond to peaks in cyclin concentration.
·
MPF
(“maturation-promoting factor” or “M-phase-promoting-factor”) triggers the
cell’s passage past the G2 checkpoint to the M phase.
°
MPF
promotes mitosis by phosphorylating a variety of other protein kinases.
°
MPF
stimulates fragmentation of the nuclear envelope by phosphorylation of various
proteins of the nuclear lamina.
°
It
also triggers the breakdown of cyclin, dropping cyclin and MPF levels during
mitosis and inactivating MPF.
§
The
noncyclin part of MPF, the Cdk, persists in the cell in inactive form until it
associates with new cyclin molecules synthesized during the S and G2 phases of
the next round of the cycle.
·
At
least three Cdk proteins and several cyclins regulate the key G1
checkpoint.
·
Similar
mechanisms are also involved in driving the cell cycle past the M phase
checkpoint.
Internal and external cues help regulate the
cell cycle.
·
While
research scientists know that active Cdks function by phosphorylating proteins,
the identity of all these proteins is still under investigation.
·
Scientists
do not yet know what Cdks actually do in most cases.
·
Some
steps in the signaling pathways that regulate the cell cycle are clear.
°
Some
signals originate inside the cell, others outside.
·
The
M phase checkpoint ensures that all the chromosomes are properly attached to
the spindle at the metaphase plate before anaphase.
°
This
ensures that daughter cells do not end up with missing or extra chromosomes.
·
A
signal to delay anaphase originates at kinetochores that have not yet attached
to spindle microtubules.
°
This
keeps the anaphase-promoting complex (APC) in an inactive state.
°
When
all kinetochores are attached, the APC activates, triggering breakdown of
cyclin and inactivation of proteins holding sister chromatids together.
·
A
variety of external chemical and physical factors can influence cell division.
°
For
example, cells fail to divide if an essential nutrient is left out of the
culture medium.
·
Particularly
important for mammalian cells are growth
factors, proteins released by one group of cells that stimulate other cells
to divide.
°
For
example, platelet-derived growth factors
(PDGF), produced by platelet blood cells, bind to tyrosine-kinase receptors
of fibroblasts, a type of connective tissue cell.
°
This
triggers a signal-transduction pathway that allows cells to pass the G1 checkpoint
and divide.
·
Each
cell type probably responds specifically to a certain growth factor or
combination of factors.
·
The
role of PDGF is easily seen in cell culture.
°
Fibroblasts
in culture will only divide in the presence of a medium that also contains
PDGF.
·
In
a living organism, platelets release PDGF in the vicinity of an injury.
°
The
resulting proliferation of fibroblasts helps heal the wound.
·
At
least 50 different growth factors can trigger specific cells to divide.
·
The
effect of an external physical factor on cell division can be seen in density-dependent inhibition of cell
division.
°
Cultured
cells normally divide until they form a single layer on the inner surface of
the culture container.
°
If
a gap is created, the cells will grow to fill the gap.
°
At
high densities, the amount of growth factors and nutrients is insufficient to
allow continued cell growth.
·
Most
animal cells also exhibit anchorage
dependence for cell division.
°
To
divide, they must be anchored to a substratum, typically the extracellular
matrix of a tissue.
°
Control
appears to be mediated by pathways involving plasma membrane proteins and
elements of the cytoskeleton linked to them.
·
Cancer
cells exhibit neither density-dependent inhibition nor anchorage dependence.
Cancer cells have escaped from cell cycle
controls.
·
Cancer
cells divide excessively and invade other tissues because they are free of the
body’s control mechanisms.
°
Cancer
cells do not stop dividing when growth factors are depleted.
°
This
is either because a cancer cell manufactures its own growth factors, has an
abnormality in the signaling pathway, or has an abnormal cell cycle control
system.
·
If
and when cancer cells stop dividing, they do so at random points, not at the
normal checkpoints in the cell cycle.
·
Cancer
cells may divide indefinitely if they have a continual supply of nutrients.
°
In
contrast, nearly all mammalian cells divide 20 to 50 times under culture
conditions before they stop, age, and die.
·
Cancer
cells may be “immortal.”
°
HeLa
cells from a tumor removed from a woman (Henrietta Lacks) in 1951 are still
reproducing in culture.
·
The
abnormal behavior of cancer cells begins when a single cell in a tissue
undergoes a transformation that
converts it from a normal cell to a cancer cell.
°
Normally,
the immune system recognizes and destroys transformed cells.
°
However,
cells that evade destruction proliferate to form a tumor, a mass of abnormal cells.
·
If
the abnormal cells remain at the originating site, the lump is called a benign tumor.
°
Most
do not cause serious problems and can be fully removed by surgery.
·
In
a malignant tumor, the cells become
invasive enough to impair the functions of one or more organs.
·
In
addition to chromosomal and metabolic abnormalities, cancer cells often lose
attachment to nearby cells, are carried by the blood and lymph system to other
tissues, and start more tumors in an event called metastasis.
°
Cancer
cells are abnormal in many ways.
°
They
may have an unusual number of chromosomes, their metabolism may be disabled,
and they may cease to function in any constructive way.
°
Cancer
cells may secrete signal molecules that cause blood vessels to grow toward the
tumor.
·
Treatments
for metastasizing cancers include high-energy radiation and chemotherapy with
toxic drugs.
°
These
treatments target actively dividing cells.
°
Chemotherapeutic
drugs interfere with specific steps in the cell cycle.
°
For
example, Taxol prevents mitotic depolymerization, preventing cells from
proceeding past metaphase.
°
The
side effects of chemotherapy are due to the drug’s effects on normal cells.
·
Researchers
are beginning to understand how a normal cell is transformed into a cancer
cell.
°
The
causes are diverse, but cellular transformation always involves the alteration
of genes that influence the cell cycle control system.