What is the cell cycle?
functional process that a cell goes through until it has divided into 2 genetically identical daughter cells
What are the main functions of the cell cycle?
What are the 2 main stages of the eukaryotic cell cycle?
- mitosis (M phase)
What are the sub-phases of interphase?
G1, S, G2
What are the stages of mitosis?
PMAT-C prophase (pro)metaphase metaphase anaphase telophase
cytokinesis
Which cells CAN enter the cell cycle?
Cells with:
Which cells CANNOT enter the cell cycle?
post-mitotic cells = terminally differentiated
these are usually highly specialised cells, which are permanently arrested from cell cycle (senescent)
What are the 3 main types of cells that CAN enter the cell cycle?
What are labile cells?
rapidly divide with short G1 phase
never in G0 phase
“rapidly dividing” cells (most affected in chemo
e.g. skin, epithelia haematopoetic tissue
What are quiescent/stable cells?
Leave G0 phase when stimulated (e.g. damage)
Enter into G1 phase from G0
e.g. hepatocytes, perioseal cells, lymphocytes
What are permanent cells?
remain in G0 phase
Can only be replaced by stem cells
e.g. skeletal muscle cells (stem cells = satellite cells), neurons, RBCs
What is the G1 phase of interphase in cell cycle?
What is the S phase of interphase in cell cycle ?
DNA replication
What mediates the high replication fidelity in S phase of cell cycle?
When does the cell progress from S phase to G2 phase?
when all chromosomes have been duplicated correctly (and checked for errors)
What is G2 phase?
When do cells progress from G2 phase to M phase?
All in order for M-phase
correct organelles, DNA proofread and checked for errors etc
What is M phase?
= mitotic phase
- MITOSIS + CYTOKINESIS
What is mitosis?
= PMAT
- division of nucleus
What is cytokinesis?
final stage of cell cycle
physical division of cytoplasm and organelles
What occurs in prophase?
What occurs in PROmetaphase?
- chromosomes attach to mitotic spindle
What occurs in metaphase?
- chromosomes line up at the equator
What happens at anaphase?