A tumor is a growing mass of abnormal cells. Give an example from this chapter of a benign tumor that becomes a malignant tumor.
Table of contents
- 1. Introduction to Genetics51m
- 2. Mendel's Laws of Inheritance3h 37m
- 3. Extensions to Mendelian Inheritance2h 41m
- 4. Genetic Mapping and Linkage2h 28m
- 5. Genetics of Bacteria and Viruses1h 21m
- 6. Chromosomal Variation1h 48m
- 7. DNA and Chromosome Structure56m
- 8. DNA Replication1h 10m
- 9. Mitosis and Meiosis1h 34m
- 10. Transcription1h 0m
- 11. Translation58m
- 12. Gene Regulation in Prokaryotes1h 19m
- 13. Gene Regulation in Eukaryotes44m
- 14. Genetic Control of Development44m
- 15. Genomes and Genomics1h 50m
- 16. Transposable Elements47m
- 17. Mutation, Repair, and Recombination1h 6m
- 18. Molecular Genetic Tools19m
- 19. Cancer Genetics29m
- 20. Quantitative Genetics1h 26m
- 21. Population Genetics50m
- 22. Evolutionary Genetics29m
19. Cancer Genetics
Overview of Cancer
Problem 4
Textbook Question
List the functions of kinases and cyclins, and describe how they interact to cause cells to move through the cell cycle.
Verified step by step guidance1
Start by defining kinases and cyclins: Kinases are enzymes that add phosphate groups to other proteins (phosphorylation), which can activate or deactivate those proteins. Cyclins are regulatory proteins whose levels fluctuate throughout the cell cycle.
Explain the role of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs): These are kinases that require binding to a cyclin to become active. Alone, CDKs are inactive; binding to the appropriate cyclin activates them.
Describe how cyclins regulate CDKs: Different cyclins are produced and degraded at specific stages of the cell cycle, ensuring that CDKs are activated only at the correct times to drive the cell cycle forward.
Outline the process of cell cycle progression: When a cyclin binds to its CDK partner, the activated complex phosphorylates target proteins that trigger transitions between cell cycle phases (e.g., G1 to S phase, G2 to M phase).
Summarize the interaction: The cyclical production and destruction of cyclins control CDK activity, which in turn regulates key checkpoints and events in the cell cycle, ensuring orderly progression through the phases.
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Key Concepts
Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.
Functions of Kinases
Kinases are enzymes that catalyze the transfer of phosphate groups to specific target proteins, a process called phosphorylation. This modification alters the activity, interactions, or localization of proteins, regulating various cellular processes including progression through the cell cycle.
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Functions of Cyclins
Cyclins are regulatory proteins whose levels fluctuate throughout the cell cycle. They bind to and activate cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs), controlling the timing and order of cell cycle events by ensuring that key processes occur only when appropriate.
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Interaction of Cyclins and Kinases in Cell Cycle Progression
Cyclins bind to CDKs, activating these kinases to phosphorylate target proteins that drive the cell through different phases of the cell cycle. This interaction ensures orderly progression, such as the transition from G1 to S phase and from G2 to mitosis, coordinating cell growth and division.
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