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Science & Tech
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Key regulators of the cell cycle hold promise
THIS YEAR'S Nobel Laureates in Physiology or Medicine have made
seminal discoveries concerning the control of the cell cycle.
They have identified key molecules that regulate the cell cycle
in all eukaryotic organisms, including yeasts, plants, animals
and human.
These fundamental discoveries have a great impact on all aspects
of cell growth. Defects in cell cycle control may lead to the
type of chromosome alterations seen in cancer cells. This may in
the long term open new possibilities for cancer treatment.
All organisms consist of cells that multiply through cell
division. An adult human being has approximately 100 000 billion
cells, all originating from a single cell, the fertilized egg
cell. In adults there is also an enormous number of continuously
dividing cells replacing those dying. Before a cell can divide it
has to grow in size, duplicate its chromosomes and separate the
chromosomes for exact distribution between the two daughter
cells. These different processes are coordinated in the cell
cycle. Cells having their chromosomes located in a nucleus and
separated from the rest of the cell, so called eukaryotic cells,
appeared on earth about two billion years ago. Organisms
consisting of such cells can either be unicellular, such as
yeasts and amoebas, or multi-cellular such as plants and animals.
The human body consists of a huge number of cells, on the average
about one billion cells per gram tissue. Each cell nucleus
contains our entire hereditary material (DNA), located in 46
chromosomes (23 pairs of chromosomes).It has been known for over
one hundred years that cells multiply through division. It is
however only during the last two decades that it has become
possible to identify the molecular mechanisms that regulate the
cell cycle and thereby cell division. These fundamental
mechanisms are highly conserved through evolution and operate in
the same manner in all eukaryotic organisms.
The phases of the cell cycle
The cell cycle consists of several phases. In the first phase
(G1) the cell grows and becomes larger. When it has reached a
certain size it enters the next phase (S), in which DNA-synthesis
takes place.
The cell duplicates its hereditary material (DNA-replication) and
a copy of each chromosome is formed. During the next phase (G2)
the cell checks that DNA-replication is completed and prepares
for cell division.
The chromosomes are separated (mitosis, M) and the cell divides
into two daughter cells. Through this mechanism the daughter
cells receive identical chromosome set ups. After division, the
cells are back in G1 and the cell cycle is completed.
The duration of the cell cycle varies between different cell
types. In most mammalian cells it lasts between 10 and 30 hours.
Cells in the first cell cycle phase (G1) do not always continue
through the cycle. Instead they can exit from the cell cycle and
enter a resting stage (G0).
Cell cycle control
For all living eukaryotic organisms it is essential that the
different phases of the cell cycle are precisely coordinated. The
phases must follow in correct order, and one phase must be
completed before the next phase can begin. Errors in this
coordination may lead to chromosomal alterations. Chromosomes or
parts of chromosomes may be lost, rearranged or distributed
unequally between the two daughter cells. This type of chromosome
alteration is often seen in cancer cells.It is of central
importance in the fields of biology and medicine to understand
how the cell cycle is controlled. This year's Nobel Laureates
have made seminal discoveries at the molecular level of how the
cell is driven from one phase to the next in the cell cycle.
Cell cycle genes in yeast cells
Leland Hartwell realized already at the end of the 1960s the
possibility of studying the cell cycle with genetic methods. He
used baker's yeast, Saccharymyces cerevisiae, as a model system,
which proved to be highly suitable for cell cycle studies. In an
elegant series of experiments 1970-71, he isolated yeast cells in
which genes controlling the cell cycle were altered (mutated). By
this approach he succeeded to identify more than one hundred
genes specifically involved in cell cycle control, so called CDC-
genes (cell division cycle genes). One of these genes, designated
CDC28 by Hartwell, controls the first step in the progression
through the G1-phase of the cell cycle, and was therefore also
called "start". In addition, Hartwell studied the sensitivity of
yeast cells to irradiation. On the basis of his findings he
introduced the concept checkpoint, which means that the cell
cycle is arrested when DNA is damaged. The purpose of this is to
allow time for DNA repair before the cell continues to the next
phase of the cycle. Later Hartwell extended the checkpoint
concept to include also controls ensuring a correct order between
the cell cycle phases.
A general principle
Paul Nurse followed Hartwell's approach in using genetic methods
for cell cycle studies. He used a different type of yeast,
Schizzosaccharomyces pombe, as a model organism. This yeast is
only distantly related to baker's yeast, since they separated
from each other during evolution more than one billion years ago.
In the middle of the 1970s, Paul Nurse discovered the gene cdc2
in S. pombe. He showed that this gene had a key function in the
control of cell division (transition from G2 to mitosis, M).
Later he found that cdc2 had a more general function. It was
identical to the gene ("start") that Hartwell earlier had
identified in baker's yeast, controlling the transition from G1
to S.This gene (cdc2) was thus found to regulate different phases
of the cell cycle.
In 1987 Paul Nurse isolated the corresponding gene in humans,
and it was later given the name CDK1 (cyclin dependent kinase 1).
The gene encodes a protein that is a member of a family called
cyclin dependent kinases, CDK. Nurse showed that activation of
CDK is dependent on reversible phosphorylation, i.e. that
phosphate groups are linked to or removed from proteins. On the
basis of these findings, half a dozen different CDK molecules
have been found in humans.
Discovery of the first cyclin
Tim Hunt discovered the first cyclin molecule in the early 1980s.
Cyclins are proteins formed and degraded during each cell cycle.
They were named cyclins because the levels of these proteins vary
periodically during the cell cycle. The cyclins bind to the CDK
molecules, thereby regulating the CDK activity and selecting the
proteins to be phosphorylated.
The discovery of cyclin, which was made using sea urchins,
Arbacia, as a model system, was the result of Hunt's finding that
this protein was degraded periodically in the cell cycle.
Periodic protein degradation is an important general control
mechanism of the cell cycle.
Tim Hunt later discovered cyclins in other species and found that
also the cyclins were conserved during evolution. Today around
ten different cyclins have been found in humans.
The three Nobel Laureates have discovered molecular mechanisms
that regulate the cell cycle.
The amount of CDK-molecules is constant during the cell cycle,
but their activities vary because of the regulatory function of
the cyclins. CDK and cyclin together drive the cell from one cell
cycle phase to the next. The CDK-molecules can be compared with
an engine and the cyclins with a gearbox controlling whether the
engine will run in the idling state or drive the cell forward in
the cell cycle.
Significance of the discoveries
Most biomedical research areas will benefit from these basic
discoveries, which may result in broad applications within many
different fields. The discoveries are important in understanding
how chromosomal instability develops in cancer cells, i.e. how
parts of chromosomes are rearranged, lost or distributed
unequally between daughter cells.
It is likely that such chromosome alterations are the result of
defective cell cycle control. It has been shown that genes for
CDK-molecules and cyclins can function as oncogenes. CDK-
molecules and cyclins also collaborate with the products of
tumour suppressor genes during the cell cycle.
The findings in the cell cycle field are about to be applied to
tumour diagnostics. Increased levels of CDK-molecules and cyclins
are sometimes found in human tumours, such as breast cancer and
brain tumours.
The discoveries may in the long term also open new principles
for cancer therapy. Already now clinical trials are in progress
using inhibitors of CDK-molecules.
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