20.5: Gene Expression and Cancer Flashcards

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1
Q

What is cancer

A

Cancer is a group of diseases caused by damage to the genes that regulate mitosis. This causes unrestrained growth of cells

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2
Q

What is a tumour

A

A tumour is uncontrollable growth of cells that constantly expands

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3
Q

Two types of tumours

A
  1. Benign (being, doesnt really do anything)

2. Malignant (bookey)

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4
Q

Benign Tumour vs Malignant tumour

A

Benign

  • Large
  • Grow slow
  • Light, normal nucleus
  • Specialised
  • Produce adhesion molecules and dont move
  • Stay in a capsule (no finger-like projections)

Malignant

  • Large
  • Grow fast
  • Dense, dark nucleus due to lots of DNA
  • Unspecialised
  • Don’t produce adhesion molecules and can move around
  • Grow finger-like projections that enter other cells
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5
Q

How does cancer formation begin

A

Cancer cells are derived from one single mutant cell that is constantly dividng

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6
Q

What two genes play a part in cancer

A
  1. Tumour Suppressor Gene

2. Oncogenes

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7
Q

What is an oncogene

A

Most oncogenes are mutations of proto-oncogenes that have been switched on permanently

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8
Q

What are proto-oncogoenes

A

Proto-oncogenes stimulate a cell to divide when growth factors attach to protein receptors on its cell membrane

This activates genes that cause DNA to replicate and the cell to divide

If a proto-oncogene mutates into an oncogene it may be permanently switched on

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9
Q

Why can a proto-oncogene be permanently switched on

A
  1. The receptor protein on the cell-surface membrane can become permanently activated, so cell division constantly occurs
  2. The oncogene may code for a growth factor that is produced excessively
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10
Q

Result of oncogene formation

A
  1. Cells divide too rapidly and out-of-control

2. Development of tumours

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11
Q

Can proto-oncogenes be inherited

A

Yes, they can be inherited leading to a greater risk of tumour formation

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12
Q

What is a tumour-suppressor gene

A

Tumour-suppressor genes slow-down cell division, repair mistakes and tell cells when to die (apoptosis)

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13
Q

Role of tumour-suppressor genes

A

A normal tumour suppressor gene maintains normal rates of cell division and prevents the formation of a tumour

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14
Q

What can occur if a tumour-suppressor gene becomes mutated

A

The tumour-suppressor gene may become permanently switched off. This results in the failure to inhibit cell growth and cells can grow out of control and form tumours

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15
Q

Typical mutations of tumour-suppressor genes

A

Hypermethylation - increased methylation

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16
Q

Process of hypermethylation

A
  1. Hypermethylation occurs in the promoter region of a tumour suppressor gene
  2. this leads to the tumour suppressor gene becoming inactivated
  3. As a result, transcription of promoter regions of tumour suppressor genes is inhibited
  4. As a result, the TSG is silenced
  5. As the TSG usually slows down the rate of cell division, its deactivation leads to increased cell division and the formation of a tumour
17
Q

Oestrogen production and breast cancer

A

Following menopause, the fat cells in breasts produce more oestrogen.

Once a tumour has developed, it further increases oestrogen concentration which leads to increased development of the tumour. This leads to even greater development of the tumour