Cell cycle

Cards (172)

  • Mitosis consists of five stages: Prophase, Prometaphase, Metaphase, Anaphase, and Telophase.
  • The mitotic spindle is essential for all stages of mitosis.
  • Centrosomes operate as microtubule organising centres (MTOC) during mitosis.
  • Organelles cannot be produced de novo therefore they must be divided equally between daughter cells.
  • ER is divided during cytokinesis and used to manufacture all other organelles.
  • Mitochondria number is high enough to ensure adequate inheritance.
  • Cytokinesis ensures inheritance of a full set of organelles.
  • Mitosis ensures inheritance of a full set of chromosomes.
  • The MTOC produces and organises three classes of microtubule spindle fibre: Astral microtubules anchor the MTOC to the cell membrane, Polar microtubules from opposite poles overlap and allow separation, Kinetochore microtubules attach to chromosomes.
  • Centrosomes duplicate and mature in S-phase.
  • In M-phase, centrosomes move to opposite poles.
  • Centrosomes must only be copied once during mitosis.
  • During Prophase, chromosomes condense to become thick and visible, the nuclear envelope breaks down, centrosomes separate and spindle fibres form.
  • Separation of centrosomes during Prophase is caused by overlapping plus ends of polar microtubules.
  • At the end of Prophase, chromosomes are free in the cytoplasm.
  • Chromosome condensation in Prophase disentangles chromatin, facilitates accurate chromosome segregation, and prevents DNA breakage in mitosis.
  • Facilitated by condensins which use ATP to remove cohesins, by the end of Prophase, centromeres are the main attachment point.
  • In Prometaphase, the nuclear envelope fragments completely, each chromatid has a kinetochore, and kinetochore microtubules search for chromosomes.
  • Dynamic instability in Prometaphase increases, plus ends of polar microtubules overlap, and motor proteins assist microtubule binding.
  • In Metaphase, centrosomes at opposite poles release microtubules that connect to kinetochores, tension aligns chromosomes at the metaphase plate, and astral microtubules attach to the cell membrane.
  • Contraction causes the cytoplasm to divide as the furrow deepens during cytokinesis.
  • Telophase is the complete depolymerisation of the spindle, with tubulin entering the cytoskeleton.
  • The breakdown of the nuclear envelope occurs in late prophase and is triggered by the phosphorylation of the chromosomes.
  • A contractile ring forms at the old metaphase plate and creates a cleavage furrow during cytokinesis.
  • The contractile force can bend a glass needle.
  • Chromosomes become less condensed and enter the interphase state during telophase.
  • Cell surface area is increased as the membrane incorporates vesicles during cleavage.
  • The contractile ring is made of two filaments: Actin and Myosin II, plus many regulatory and structural proteins.
  • Nuclear pore complexes pump in nuclear proteins and the nucleus expands during telophase.
  • Astral microtubules connect to the kinetochores during mitosis.
  • During anaphase, two mechanisms move chromosomes: Motor proteins 'walk' chromosomes along microtubules from the plus end, and the microtubule depolymerises once the protein has moved past.
  • The nuclear envelope reforms from fragments left after prophase and prometaphase during telophase.
  • The plane of division in cytokinesis is determined by signals generated by the spindle during anaphase.
  • Anaphase A is the separation of chromosomes, driven by depolymerisation of microtubules at the plus end.
  • Cytokinesis starts in anaphase and finishes immediately after telophase.
  • Anaphase B is the separation of spindles, partly driven by depolymerisation of microtubules at the minus end and partly by activity of motor proteins at the plus end.
  • Motor proteins at the MTOC 'reel in' microtubules from the minus end, and the microtube depolymerises once past the MTOC.
  • Sister chromatids are bound together by cohesion rings before they are allowed to separate during anaphase.
  • Seperase cleaves cohesins at the centromere in Anaphase, chromatids are now called chromosomes, and depolymerisation at both plus and minus ends of kinetochore microtubules moves chromosomes polewards.
  • In Anaphase, polar microtubules lengthen causing cells to expand, the extent of overlap is less in Anaphase than Metaphase, and at the end of Anaphase poles contain an identical set of chromosomes.