Totipotent - can develop into any cell type including the placenta and embryo
Pluripotent - can develop into any cell type excluding the placenta and embryo.
Multipotent - can only develop into a few different types of cell.
Unipotent - can only develop into once type of cell
Suggest some uses of stem cells
Repair of damaged tissue e.g. cardiomyocytes after myocardial infarction
Drug testing on artificially grown tissues
Treating neurological diseases e.g. Alzheimer's & Parkinson's
Researching developmental biology e.g. formation of organs, embryos
What is a stem cell?
Undifferentiated cells that can divide indefinitely and turn into other specific cell types
How do transcription factors work?
Move from the cytoplasm into nucleus
Bind to promoter region upstream of target gene
Makes it easier or more difficult for RNA polymerase to bind to gene. This increases or decreases rate of transcription
How do cells become specialised?
Some genes are expressed while others are silenced due to cell differentiation mediated by transcription factors. Cells produce proteins that determine their structure & function
What is a transcription factor?
A protein that controls the transcription of genes so that only certain parts of the DNA are expressed, e.g. in order to allow a cell to specialise
Independent assortment (random segregation) of homologous chromosomes & sister chromatids
Result in new combinations of alleles
What happens during meiosis I ?
Homologous chromosomes pair to form bivalents
Crossing over (exchange of sections of genetic material) occurs at chiasmata
Cell divides into two. Homologous chromosomes separate randomly. Each cell contains either maternal or paternal copy
What are homologous chromosomes?
• Pair of chromosomes with genes at the same locus. 1 maternal & 1 paternal
• Some alleles may be the same while others are different
Describe what happens at each key checkpoint in the cell cycle
• Between G1 & S, cell checks for DNA damage (e.g. via action of p53). After restriction point, cell enters cycle
• Between G2 & M, cell checks chromosome replication
• At metaphase checkpoint, cell checks that sister chromatids have attached to spindle correctly
What is meiosis?
A form of cell division that produces four genetically different haploid cells (cells with half the number of chromosomes found in the parent cell) known as gametes
What happens during cytokinesis?
Cell membrane cleavage furrow forms
Contractile division of cytoplasm
How is the cell cycle regulated?
• Checkpoints regulated by cell-signalling proteins ensure damaged cells do not progress to next stage of cycle.
• Cyclin-dependent kinase enzymes phosphorylate proteins that initiate next phase of reactions
Outline what happens during anaphase
Requires energy from ATP hydrolysis
Spindle fibres contract = centromeres divide
Sister chromatids separate into 2 distinct chromosomes & are pulled to opposite poles of cell. (looks like 'V' shapes facing each other)
Spindle fibres break down
Outline what happens during telophase
Chromosomes decondense, becoming invisible again
New nuclear envelopes form around eachset of chromosomes = 2 new nuclei, each with 1 copy of each chromosome