What are the phases of the eukaryotic cell cycle? What are the major events?
G1 Phase
S Phase: DNA replication
G2 Phase
M Phase: Chromosome segregation
How is the cell cycle regulated
Cell cycle regulated gene transcription
Cell cycle regulated mRNA translation
Cell cycle regulated protein proteolysis
Cell cycle regulated protein modifications
reversible phosphorylation
-> kinases and phosphatases
What are cyclin dependent kinases?
Cyclin dependent kinases are kinases (phosphorylation) which depend on the co-factor cyclin to be activated
there are different classes of CDKs which differ in the activation (different cyclins) and therefore are active in different phases of the cell cycle
What role plays cyclin dependent kinases (CDK) in the cell cycle?
cyclin dependent kinases are the key drivers of the cell cycle
Different CDKs are activated by different cyclins, which levels oscillate during the cell cycle
Therefore different CDK complexes are sequentially activated or inactivated
the activated CDK phosphorylates many different proteins for example involved in the initial steps of mitosis (for example breakdown of nuclear envelope) or associated with chromosomes (condensation)
Phosphorylates many hundreds of proteins only in mitosis
How does cyclin regulate the cell cycle?
the subunits of the CDKs are present in the cell all the time
But there is a sequential fluctuation in the presence of the different cyclins
The cyclins are up regulated by their gene expression
The down regulation is via protein degradation (prevents re-activation of CDKs)
How are CDKs activated?
the CDK subunits are present in the cell all the time
The specific cyclin needs to bind to the subunit to partlyactivate the enzyme
Additionally a phosphorylation in the t-loop by a CDK-activating kinase (CAK) is required
This enables a switch of activation of the CDKs: first the CDK-cyclin complexes are formed and they are activated by the phosphorylation
To ensure the “switch-on” activity and that the CDKs are not active before the cell cycle transition happens, they are inhibitory phosphorylated by 2 kinases:
Wee1= Ser/Thr kinase, Myt1=Tyr kinase
Wee1 places an inhibitory phosphorylation on the CDK subunit on a Thr residue and Myt1 places a second inhibitory phosphorylation on a Tyr residue
-> accumulate a lot of CDKs but they are inactive-> switch on activation
The final activation is Katalysen by the phosphatase cdc25, which de phosphorylates both inhibitory phosphorylations
Explain the down regulation of CDKs
down regulation by proteolysis via Ubiquitin and proteasomes
2 major Ubiquitin ligases = E3: SCF Complex, APC/C Complex
Ubiquitin polyasome pathway
Attachment of ubiquitin to mark the target protein (cyclin) for proteolysis when CDK activity is no longer needed
Different phases of cell cycle-> different Ubiquitin ligases
The SCF Complex
degrading cyclins mainly between G1 and S phase but active throughout the cell cycle
Substrate recognition by F-box proteins
Recognition of phosphorylated target proteins
The APC/C Complex
degradation of S phase cyclins: active in mitosis and G1
Activating subunits (not F-box): CDC20 and CDH1
Substrate recognition by sequence motifs: D-box, KEN-Box
Recognition independent of phosphorylation
What are the major regulatory mechanisms of the cell cycle?
Cell cycle regulated gene expression (oscillating cyclins)
Cell cycle regulated Ubiquitin mediated protein proteolysis (SCF, APC/C)
Reversible protein phosphorylation (kinases and phosphatases)
Is every cell going thriugh the cell cycle?
no only 0.3%
Differentiated cells (majority) lost ability to under go cell cycle
Few cells like Epithelial cells or tissue renewal cells can enter the cell cycle (not constantly in the cell cycle) in G1 phase
To enter the cell cycle these resting cells need growth factors (cancer cells don’t): mitogenic signalling
Explain the mitogenic growth factor signalling pathway
Growth factor binds to receptor (dimerisation of receptor)
Leads to activation of Ras GTPase
Activates MAP kinase pathway (RAF, MEK, MAPK)
Phosphorylation of the serum response factor in the nucleus
SRF = TF: activates a second wave of gene expression-> production of additional TF (Fos, Jun, Myc)
Fos, Jun, Myc responsible for gene expression of various substrates regulating the cell cycle (cyclin D, cyclin E)
The unregulated Cyclin D and cyclin E activate specific CDKs which phosphorylate substrates like E2F which allow the entry of the cell cycle by regulating the majority of S phase related genes
Why are the E2F Transcription factors impotant for the cell cycle?
the E2F transcription factors are activated by a cascade, initialised by growth factors/ mitogens (-> Ras-> RAF-> MAPK-> serum response factor-> Fos, jun, Myc-> cyclin D/E -> CDK -> E2F)
Regulates the replication of cell cycle proteins: cdc6, MCM, RPA
Activation of CDK (cyclin A)
Some are activators of transcription and some are repressors
Pocket proteins mediate the activation of E2F: inhibit the E2F by forming a bond
-> inhibit the Repressor function or inhibit the activator function
Explain senescence
senescence = permanent exit from cell cycle
Typical human cell has a division limit = hayfield limit (appr. 50 times)
Even with high levels of mitogens/ growth factors the cell divides max 50 times
Due to an accumulation of (oxidative) stress signals and telomere shortening -> DNA damage, oncogene activation
Counting mechanism is mediated by p16 proteins (=major Tumor suppressor)
P16 accumulates from cell cycle to cell cycle
P16 is a CDK inhibitor (increasing number of cell cycles: progressive inhibition of CDK)
-> no E2F -> no gene expression -> exit of cell cycle
=> preventing DNA damage
Loss of p16: no chance to control cell cycle clock-> cell cycle would continue without limit-> accumulation of DNA damage -> transformation of cells
What are the functions of p16 and cdc4 in the cell cycle?
p16 is part of the cell cycle clock and can stop the cell cycle if required (to prevent DNA damage and transformation of cells)
It inhibits Cdk4 which would normally phosphorylate the pocket proteins to break the bond to the E2Fs
Cdc4 is a F-box protein which works together with the SCF complex.
It’s responsible for the degradation of cyclin E.
The upregulation of Cdc4 would result in a down regulation of cyclin E. This would stop the cell cycle entry
Which proteins are possible Tumor suppressors?
P16, cdc4, pRB
P53
Major Tumor suppressor, guardian of the genome
TF which is activated in response to DNA damage -> protective function
TF p53 has many downstream target genes: p21 protein which is similar to p16. It acts as a CDK 1/ 2 inhibitor
Stops the cell cycle -> time frame for DNA repair
Can activate DNA repair genes
Loss of p53: no response to DNA damage
Tumor cells continue proliferation even in the presence of DNA damage
How does anti-cancer therapy works?
DNA damage on purpose to activate the p53 pathway
-> stop Cell-cycle and hyper proliferation
Alternative: CDK inhibitor -> targeting CDK 4
Problem: Not Tumor specific -> affecting also normal cells
affecting stem cell renewal, renewal of tissue, epithelial layers…
-> side effects (for example: loss of hair follicle because they are high proliferating)
Last changeda year ago