Give examples for the importance of cell polarity.
migrating fibroblast
Cytotoxic T cell
Epithelial cell
polarized dividing cell (e.g. stem cells —> only one can differentiate the other stays stem cell)
How is apical - basel polarity maintained by epithelial cells?
Polarity proteins provide a molecular machinery that can establish and maintain polar identity of cellular domains
Apical: Crumbs / aPKC / Par-6 / Par-3
Basel: Scribble / Discs-large (Dlg) / Lethal giant larvae (Lgl)
regulatory network of positive and negative feedback amplifies and maintains the polarity cues
the polarity proteins are conserved throughout animal kingdom and regulate many processes
loss of polarity is associated with pathological consequences (tumor / metastasis)
polarity tightly linked with cytoskeleton
Actin filaments are the central functional unit of the cytoskeleton, what are the key characteristics?
Actin filaments:
fast elongation [at plus end] (Actin filaments (F-actin) grow by addition of ATPbound actin monomers (G-actin) and depolymerize as a consequence of ATP Hydrolysis) and recycling [at minus end]
Actin filaments form helical double strands with a fixed polarity
Actin filaments facilitate maintenance of cell shape and dynamic changes of cell shape —> migrating cells use actin to push forward and then contraction
The Rho GTPases organize actin dynamics
Myosins are the motorproteins that walk on actin filaments (Cortex contraction / Filament sliding (contraction) / Vesicle transport)
Microtubuli are central cytoskeleton units with different (mechanical) properties than actin, what are the similarities what is different?
Microtubule:
similarities: • Polarity • Dynamic growth/shrinkage • ATP/GTP hydrolysis cycles
Addition of a GTP-bound α/β tubulin dimer generates a GTP cap on the plus end of the microtubule (stabilizes tubule growth and protects from degradation until GTP is hydrolyzed)
Motorproteins: in plus direction —> Kinesin and in minus direction <— Dynein
Push and pull forces in the mitotic spindle mediate chromosome segregation
—> cell division, centrosome, cilia
Explain the dynamics of the mitotic spindle.
Push and pull forces in the mitotic spindle mediate chromosome segregation:
in the equatorial plane the chromosomes are located before they are pulled (and pushed) apart by the microtubles, in the centre the microtubles overlap and plus end directed motorproteins (Kinesins) push the microtubles to each pole
the centreosomes (the main microtubule organizing center and regulator of cell cycle progression) are located in the centre of microtubles minus end pointing towards them
at the cell cortex of two poles minus end directed motorproteins (Dyneins) pull on the microtubles also moving the centrosome the each pole
What are the key characteristics of Intermediate filaments?
Intermediate filaments:
support the structure and mechanical stability of many animal cells
are flexible and tolerate mechanical stress (rubber like), stable and long lasting
form helical multimers formed from Keratin (epithelial), Vimentin (muscle) or Laminin (nucleus) proteins
are key for cell-cell (desmosomes) and cell-matrix (hemidesmosome) adhesion
important for mechanical stability of our epithelial tissue (skin doesnt rip when pulled)
Name examples where regulated cell death is needed.
tissue remodelling: in develope ment (skin between fingers or tail of frog)
tissue turn-over: lactation cells only needed when child is born
renewal of damaged cells: after sunburn the skin needs to be renewed
Briefly explain apoptosis, autophagy and necrosis, what are the important differences?
Apoptosis: cell shrinkage, chromatin condensation, blebbing and encloses all contents in blebs to be taken up by phagocytosis by healthy cell
Autophagy: self eating, the cell self digests (specific) contents in autolysosomes inside itself
Necrosis: the cell swells and bursts releasing all contents uncontrolled causing inflammation (proinflammatory molecules e.g. DNA)
all have different triggers, morphologies and results
How is apoptosis regulated?
Apoptosis is regulated by caspases
an apoptotic signal by an adaptor protein causes the initiator caspase (8/9) to dimerize
that activates the effector caspases (3/6/7) by cleavage —> then again this active caspase cleaves mutiple substrates and degrading cellular proteins which leads to apoptosis
caspases can self amplify by activating more and more caspases in an hierachy by cleavage
CAD cleaves the DNA between histones after beeing activated by an effector caspase that cleaves the inhibitory iCAD
How can apoptosis be activated?
Extrinsic pathway:
killer lymphocyt with Fas ligand binds to cell
death receptors [Fas or TRAILR] activate death inducing signaling complex (DISC) that bind caspases and activate them by cleavage
Intrinsic pathway:
DNA-damage, ER stress, hypoxia, starvation are lethal stimuli
they activate BAX and BAK (inhibition by BCL2 they are all one family)
they trigger mitochondria as central regulator causing them to release cytochrome c
cytochrome c binds and activates the adaptor protein forming a wheel (apoptosome) and recruiting and activating caspase 9
Extra: Ras/Raf/MEK/ERK pathway inhibits Caspase 9 —> high cell division and low apoptosis = cancer
Explain the cell cycle phases, their cyclin and their cell cycle checkpoints.
G1 phase (with G0 arrest phase and G1 control point):
G1/S-Cyclin with G1/S cyclin dependent kinase (Cdk)
gap phase for cell growth and preparation of following phase
Damaged DNA? sufficient cell volume? favorable environvent?
S-phase:
S-Cyclin and S-Cdk
DNA-replication
G2 phase (with G2 control point)
S-Cyclin and starting M-Cyclin
like G1 phase
unreplicated or damaged DNA? favorable environvent?
M phase (mitose with prophase, prometaphase, metaphase (chromosomes in equatorial axis), anaphase (mitotic spindle pulls apart) and telophase and then cytokinesis) (with M control point)
S-Cyclin falling off to Metaphase-Anaphase
M-Cyclin and M-Cdk
APC/C at meta-ana transition
chromosome misalignment?
How do the cyclin/Cdk complexes work?
Cyclin dependent kinases with Cyclin active and fully active when phosphorylated
Cyclin D —> all phases
E —> G1 / S
A —> S + G2
B —> G2 + M (between meta and anaphase
The Cyclin/Cdk complexes target specific effectors:
DNA replication machinery
mitotic spindle
Cyclin can be ubiquinated and degraded by proteasomes
P21 or P27 are Cyclin kinase inhibitors (guardians)
P53 as the guardian of the genome is the TF for P21 (and others) stopping the cell cycle, responsible for cell aging (when telomeres are used up no more dividing) and apoptosis
Last changeda year ago