Signal Transduction
Cell Cycle
Mitosis
Cell Cycle Regulation
Cancer
100

The steps of the signal transduction pathway

What is Reception, transduction, response

100

Cells divide for these reasons (at least 2)

what is: exchanging material, repair/replace cells, and reproduction

100

What is the main purpose of mitosis? 

(a) to reduce chromosome number, (b) to make identical daughter cells, (c) to make gametes, (d) to combine chromosomes

(b) to make identical daughter cells 
100

What are the 3 Cell Cycle Checkpoints?

G1, G2, M 

100

Name of proto-oncogenes when the gene is mutated

Oncogenes

200

The process which involves increasing the strength of a cellular signal during signal transduction

What is Amplification

200

The phases of the cell cycle (in order)

What is G1, S, G2, M

200

If mitotic spindle formation is disrupted, what would you expect to observe? 

(a) DNA replication would fail, (b) chromosomes wouldn't condense, (c) chromosomes wouldn't separate properly, (d) cytokinesis would occur normally

(c) chromosomes wouldn't separate properly

200

These signals are found inside and outside the cell to control the cell cycle

Regulatory Proteins

200

Which cellular process becomes dysregulated first in most cancers?

(a) cell adhesion, (b) cell cycle control, (c) protein synthesis, (d) Energy production

(b) cell cycle control

300

 Two examples of juxtacrine signaling

What is the Plasmodesmata (plants)

What are glycoproteins (animals)

300

When will a cell be in G0? 

Resting, not ready for cell division

300

Cell Observations: 

- chromatin condenses into visible chromosomes

- nuclear envelope has disappeared

A student looking through a microscope records observations about a cell. Which stage of the cell cycle has the student described?

What is Prophase

300

Which two checkpoints can stop the cell cycle and initiate apoptosis when the cell fails to meet the requirements for cell division?

G2 and M 

300

Cancer cells do not respond to ___________-__________ inhibition and __________ dependence. 

density dependent inhibition and anchorage dependence 

400

The type of enzyme adds phosphate groups to proteins during signal transduction

What is Kinase


400

Cells spend most of their time in this phase of the cell cycle

Interphase

400

At a point in the cell cycle, chromosomes have aligned near the middle of a cell. Which sequence of events will the cell need to complete to produce two identical daughter cells?

anaphase--> telophase--> cytokinesis

400

When are Cdks active and inactive- how does this affect the cell cycle?

Active when cyclin is attached--> GO!

Inactive when not bound--> STOP!

400

What is the primary function of tumor suppressor proteins? 

(a) stimulating cell division, (b) blocking apoptosis, (c) checking for DNA damage, (d) causing mutations

(c) checking for DNA damage

500

Which combination would most effectively stop a signal transduction pathway?

(a) adding agonist and kinases, (b) combining phosphatases and antagonists (c) adding more receptors and kinases (d) increasing amplification and phosphorylation

b) combining phosphatases and antagonist

500

Which phases of the Cell cycle contain chromatin and which contain chromosomes?

Interphase= chromatin 

M phase (mitosis)= chromosomes

500

Put the stages in order 

D--> C --> E --> A --> B --> F

500

Which process ensures that different cyclin-dependent kinases act at specific times during the cell cycle? 

(a) random binding,  (b) continuous activation, (c) periodic synthesis of degradation of cyclins,  (d) permanent attachment of cyclins

(c) periodic synthesis of degradation of cyclins

500

Cancer cells can produce this type of regulatory proteins to activate cell division through autocrine signaling 

Growth Factors

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