1/11 Molecular Basis of Cancer 2 - Corbett Flashcards

1
Q

tumor progression

A

tendency for tumors to become more aggressive and acquire greater malignant potential over time AND become more resistant to treatment

key component: acquisition of multiple mutations

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2
Q

glioblastoma multiforme

pathogenesis

A

overproduction of growth factor PDGF

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3
Q

amplification or point mutation in receptor Tyr kinases → malignant transformation

epidermal growth factor receptor

A

ERBB1 and lung cancer

  • point mutations described in adenocarcinoma
  • overexpression in squamous cell carcinomas

ERBB2 (HER2/NEU) and breast cancer

  • amplified in 25-30% of breast cancers → constitutive kinase activity
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4
Q

mutation of downstream signaling proteins

A

point mutations of Ras family genes are most common abnormalities involving proto-oncogenes

ex. BRAF V600E in msclc/colorectal/melanoma, tx: vemurafenib

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5
Q

tumor suppressor genes

A

normal cellular proteins that negatively regulate cell growth

typically, both alleles damaged → transformed phenotype

governors: typically hinder cell proliferation

guardians: sense genomic damage

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6
Q

explanations and common theme:

  1. retinoblastoma protein
  2. p53
  3. adenomatous polyposis coli
  4. transforming growth factor beta
A
  1. retinoblastoma: key negative regulator of G1/S phase transition
  • unphosphorylated Rb binds E2F (tf), blocking it from binding DNA → transcription blocked, S phase blocked
  • during cell growth, Rb is phosphorylated → E2F released → E2F binds DNA and gene expression occurs → cell cycle progresses
  • directly or indirectly INACTIVATED in most cancers
    • cytogenetic deletions
    • point mutations
    • promoter hypermethylation to turn off expression!
  • Rb compromised via…LOF mutations, viral inhibition
  • results in retinoblastoma (childhood ocular malignancy → leukocoria, strabisumus, uveitis, glaucoma)
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7
Q

explanations and common theme:

  1. retinoblastoma protein
  2. p53
  3. adenomatous polyposis coli
  4. transforming growth factor beta
A
  1. p53: central monitor of stress in cell
  • most frequently mutated gene in human cancer
  • fx:
    • cell cycle arrest: CDKI/p21 transcribed → inhibits cyclin-Cdk, blocks Rb-P
    • cell cycle arrest at G1/S checkpoint
      • DNA repair or…
      • apoptosis
  • typically, p53 has short halflife
    • MDM2 targets p53 for degradation
  • cellular stress? p53 released from MDM2

Li Fraumeni syndrome: cancer predisposition syndrome

  • germline mutation in one p53 gene
  • autosomal dominant
  • 25x incr in cancer risk
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8
Q

effect of DNA viruses

A

HPV, HBV, EBV can bind p53 and Rb and nullify their protective fx

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9
Q

explanations and common theme:

  1. retinoblastoma protein
  2. p53
  3. adenomatous polyposis coli
  4. transforming growth factor beta
A
  1. adenomatous polyposis coli (APC)
  • part of WNT signaling pathway → controls cell fate, adhesion, polarity
  • exerts antiproliferative effect by regulating destruction of cytoplasmic protein beta-catenin
    • loss of APC → beta catenin accumulation, translocation to nucleus → acts as growth promoting tf
    • somatic loss of both APC alleles seen in 70% of sporadic colon cancer

familiar adenomatous polyposis

  • auto dom APC gene mutation → inapprop Wnt signaling
  • pts develop 100-1000s of polyps in colon by early 20s
  • 100% devlops colon cancer at 35-40
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10
Q

explanations and common theme:

  1. retinoblastoma protein
  2. p53
  3. adenomatous polyposis coli
  4. transforming growth factor beta
A
  1. TGFbeta
  • potent inhibitor of proliferation in normal cells
  • mutations in TGFbeta receptor or SMADs affects transduction of antiproliferative signals

100% pacreatic, 83% colon cancers have at least one component of pathway mutated

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11
Q

4 definitive Lynch Syndrome genes

A

1. MSH2

2. MLH1

  1. MSH6
  2. PMS2

bold account for 90% of patients with Lynch syndrome

mutations in genes involved in DNA mismatch repair → no proofreading →microsatellite instability seen in Lynch syndrome

  • familiar carcinoma of colon involving cecum and prox colon, endometrium, other organs
  • auto dom
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12
Q

breast cancer genes

A

BRCA1 and BRCA2

  • tumor suppressor
    • ​repair of dsbs
    • transcription
    • ubiquitination

gen pop frequency = 1:400

confer 10-30x higher risk

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