1
Q

muations that occur after fertilisation

A

acquired mutations

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2
Q

tumour supressor genes

A
  1. inactivated if mutation occurs
  2. when functioning slow cell division by producing proteins that stop cells dividing or causes them to self destruct (apoptosis)
  3. mutation = protein not produced. cells divide uncontrollably = tumour
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3
Q

proto-oncogenes

A
  1. effect of proto-oncogene increased by mutation -> oncogene
  2. when functioning normally stimulate cell division by producing proteins that make cells divide
  3. mutation = overactive. cells divide uncontrollably = tumour
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4
Q

benign tumour

A

not cancerous
grow slower
covered in fibrous tissue (stops cells invating other tissue)
harmless but can cause blockages and put pressure on organs
some can become malignant

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5
Q

malignant tumour

A

cancer
grow rapidly
invade / destroy surrounding tissue
cells can break off tumours and spread to other parts of body via blood stream or lymphatic system

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6
Q

differency between cancer cells and normal cells

A
irregular shape 
nucleus larger and darker 
different antigens 
dont respond to growth regulating processes 
divide more frequently
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7
Q

methylation and tumour suppressor genes

A

hypermethylation
genes not transcribed
proteins they produce to slow cell division not made
divide uncontrollably

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8
Q

methylation and proto-onco genes

A

hypomethylation
act as oncogenes
increases production of proteins that encourage cell division
divide uncontrollably

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9
Q

oestrogen

A

increased exposure thought to increase womans risk of developing breast cancer

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10
Q

theorys behind oestrogen and breast cancer

A
  1. can stimulate breast cells to divide and replicate. more cell division = increased chance of mutations occurring = increase chance of being cancerous
  2. if cells do become cancerous rapid replication could be further assisted by oestrogen
  3. suggested oestrogen is able to introdcue mutations directly into DNA of breast cells = increases chance of becoming cancerous
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11
Q

risk factors

A
  1. genetic factors - specific inhereited alleles = more likely to get cancer
  2. environmental factors - exposure to radiation, life style choices such as smoking, increased alcohol consumption and high fat diet linked to increased chance of developing cancer
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