Overview

Cell cycle: ordered sequence of events leading to cell growth and division. Purpose: produce two genetically identical daughter cells. Components: interphase (G1, S, G2 phases), mitosis (M phase), cytokinesis. Control mechanisms ensure genome integrity, proper replication, and division. Relevance: tissue growth, development, repair, reproduction, cancer biology.

"The cell cycle is the fundamental program that orchestrates cell growth and division, essential to life." -- Arthur Kornberg

Definition

Series of biochemical and morphological events culminating in cell duplication.

Biological Importance

Regulates organismal development, maintains homeostasis, enables reproduction.

Historical Context

Early studies: 19th-century microscopy revealed mitosis; 20th-century molecular elucidation of regulatory pathways.

Phases of the Cell Cycle

Interphase

Longest phase; cell grows, metabolizes, prepares for division. Subdivided:

  • G1 phase: cell growth, organelle synthesis, checkpoint for DNA damage.
  • S phase: DNA synthesis, chromosome duplication.
  • G2 phase: final prep, protein synthesis, centrosome duplication.

M phase (Mitosis)

Chromosome segregation and division. Includes prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase, followed by cytokinesis.

G0 Phase

Quiescent state; cells exit cycle, can re-enter or differentiate.

PhaseDurationKey Events
G1Variable (hours)Cell growth, preparation for DNA synthesis
S6-8 hoursDNA replication
G23-4 hoursPreparation for mitosis
M~1 hourChromosome segregation, cytokinesis

Molecular Regulation

Key Regulators

Cyclins, cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), tumor suppressors (p53, Rb), checkpoint kinases (Chk1/Chk2).

Signal Transduction

External and internal cues modulate cyclin/CDK activity via phosphorylation, ubiquitination.

Feedback Loops

Positive and negative feedback maintain unidirectional progression and prevent aberrant cycling.

Activation: Cyclin binds CDK → CDK phosphorylation → substrate phosphorylation → phase progressionInhibition: CDK inhibitors (p21, p27) bind CDK → block activity → halt cycle

Cell Cycle Checkpoints

G1/S Checkpoint

Assesses DNA integrity before replication; prevents S phase entry if damage detected.

Intra-S Checkpoint

Monitors replication stress; slows or halts DNA synthesis if errors occur.

G2/M Checkpoint

Verifies complete and accurate DNA replication; blocks mitosis entry if defects exist.

M Checkpoint (Spindle Assembly)

Ensures proper chromosome attachment to spindle microtubules; prevents anaphase until correct alignment.

CheckpointPhaseFunction
G1/SEnd of G1DNA damage assessment
Intra-SS phaseReplication stress response
G2/MEnd of G2DNA replication completeness
M (Spindle)MetaphaseChromosome attachment validation

Cyclins and Cyclin-Dependent Kinases (CDKs)

Function

Drive cell cycle transitions via phosphorylation of target proteins; cyclins regulate CDK activity temporally.

Types

Cyclin D (G1 phase), Cyclin E (G1/S transition), Cyclin A (S phase), Cyclin B (G2/M transition).

Regulation

Synthesis and degradation of cyclins regulate CDK activation; CDK inhibitors modulate activity.

Complex formation: Cyclin + CDK → active kinaseSubstrate phosphorylation → progression to next phaseCyclin degradation → CDK inactivation → cell cycle arrest/reset

DNA Replication

Timing

Occurs exclusively in S phase; tightly coordinated with cell cycle machinery.

Mechanism

Initiation: origin licensing and firing; elongation: DNA polymerases synthesize new strands; termination: replication forks converge.

Fidelity

Proofreading by DNA polymerases, mismatch repair systems maintain genome stability.

Mitosis

Phases

Prophase: chromosome condensation, spindle formation. Metaphase: chromosome alignment at equator. Anaphase: sister chromatids separate. Telophase: nuclear envelope re-forms.

Cytokinesis

Physical division of cytoplasm; cleavage furrow formation in animal cells, cell plate formation in plants.

Outcome

Two genetically identical diploid daughter cells.

Meiosis

Purpose

Generate haploid gametes with genetic diversity via recombination and reductional division.

Stages

Two successive divisions: meiosis I (reductional), meiosis II (equational).

Differences from Mitosis

Homologous chromosome pairing, crossing-over, halving chromosome number.

Cell Cycle Arrest and Apoptosis

Triggers

DNA damage, incomplete replication, spindle defects activate checkpoints causing arrest.

Mechanisms

p53 activation induces CDK inhibitors; persistent damage leads to apoptotic pathways.

Biological Significance

Prevents propagation of damaged cells, maintains organismal health.

Cell Cycle Aberrations and Cancer

Causes

Mutations in regulatory genes (p53, Rb, cyclins), oncogene activation, tumor suppressor loss.

Consequences

Uncontrolled proliferation, genomic instability, tumor formation.

Therapeutic Targets

CDK inhibitors, checkpoint modulators used in cancer treatment.

Experimental Techniques

Flow Cytometry

Measures DNA content; distinguishes cell cycle phases.

BrdU Incorporation

Labels newly synthesized DNA; identifies S phase cells.

Western Blotting

Detects cyclins, CDKs, checkpoint proteins.

Live Cell Imaging

Tracks cell cycle progression in real time using fluorescent markers.

Summary Table

PhaseKey EventsMain Regulators
G1Cell growth, environment sensing, DNA damage checkpointCyclin D-CDK4/6, Rb, p53
SDNA replicationCyclin A-CDK2, DNA polymerases
G2Preparation for mitosis, DNA damage checkpointCyclin A-CDK1, Cyclin B-CDK1, Chk1/2
MChromosome segregation, cytokinesisCyclin B-CDK1, APC/C

References

  • Murray, A. W. "Cell cycle checkpoints." Current Opinion in Cell Biology, vol. 7, 1995, pp. 872-876.
  • Nurse, P. "Cyclin-dependent kinases and cell cycle control." Nature Cell Biology, vol. 11, 2009, pp. 127-134.
  • Hartwell, L. H., & Weinert, T. A. "Checkpoints: controls that ensure the order of cell cycle events." Science, vol. 246, 1989, pp. 629-634.
  • Sherr, C. J. "Cancer cell cycles." Science, vol. 274, 1996, pp. 1672-1677.
  • Alberts, B. et al. Molecular Biology of the Cell. 6th ed., Garland Science, 2014.