The cell cycle consists of several phases:
M phase: mitosis (karyokinesis & cytokinesis)
G1 phase: growth
S phase: DNA replication
G2 phase: growth
M phase lasts for 30-43 minutes and includes mitosis (nuclear division) and cytokinesis.
G2 phase is the cytoplasmic division.
G2 interphase occurs before mitosis.
S phase is the DNA replication phase.
G1 phase is the longest phase and is a growth phase.
Mitotic spindle assembly and complete cell division are triggered by the machinery and completion of mitosis.
Checkpoints, such as the M checkpoint, G2 checkpoint, and G1 checkpoint, determine if the cell is ready for the next phase.
The S checkpoint triggers DNA replication machinery to replicate DNA.
Checkpoints, such as the G2 checkpoint, M checkpoint, and G1 checkpoint, ensure that the DNA is intact and the environment is favorable for cell division.
If something goes wrong in the cell, it will stop at a checkpoint and fix the DNA.
Cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) and cyclin control the cell cycle.
Cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) is also known as maturation promoting factor (MPF).
Cyclin causes the activation of cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk).
The cyclin/Cdk complex is necessary for cell division during mitosis and interphase.
M-Cdk activity and M-cyclin concentration play a role in the cell cycle.
Ubiquitination marks cyclin for destruction.
Proteosomes degrade proteins that are ubiquitinated, including cyclin.
The cell recycles M-cyclin and undergoes the destruction of M-cyclin and inactivation of M-Cdk.
Xenopus oocyte is used to study the cell cycle.
MPF was first discovered in oocytes of Rana (leopard frog) by Dr. Yoshio Masui in 1971
Phosphorylation modulates MPF.
Autophosphorylation produces an abrupt increase in active MPF.
Table showing the major cyclins and Cdks of vertebrates.
Different cyclin-Cdk complexes are involved in different phases of the cell cycle.
Cyclin B is involved in the entry into mitosis.
Phosphorylation cascade results in chromatin condensation, disassembly of the nuclear envelope, and reorganization of microtubules.
Cyclin A is involved in the entry into S-phase.
Cyclin A plus Cdk2 begins S-phase.
Cdc6 is pre-assembled onto the origin and is removed and destroyed by cyclinA/Cdk2 to prevent rereplication of DNA.
Origin of replication is controlled by S-Cdk.
S-checkpoint ensures proper DNA replication.
G1 checkpoint and S checkpoint play a role in the cell cycle.
Mutations in the p53 gene are implicated in various cancers.
G1 checkpoint involves ubiquitin ligase (Mdm2).
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Apoptosis is regulated by the Bcl-2 protein family.
Some Bcl-2 proteins are apoptosis activators, while others are inhibitors of apoptosis.
The cell cycle consists of four phases: G1, S, G2, and M.
G1 phase prepares the cell for DNA replication.
G2 phase prepares the cell for mitosis and cytokinesis.
M-Cdk phosphorylates condensin proteins.