20.5: Gene Expression and Cancer Flashcards
What is cancer
Cancer is a group of diseases caused by damage to the genes that regulate mitosis. This causes unrestrained growth of cells
What is a tumour
A tumour is uncontrollable growth of cells that constantly expands
Two types of tumours
- Benign (being, doesnt really do anything)
2. Malignant (bookey)
Benign Tumour vs Malignant tumour
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
How does cancer formation begin
Cancer cells are derived from one single mutant cell that is constantly dividng
What two genes play a part in cancer
- Tumour Suppressor Gene
2. Oncogenes
What is an oncogene
Most oncogenes are mutations of proto-oncogenes that have been switched on permanently
What are proto-oncogoenes
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
Why can a proto-oncogene be permanently switched on
- The receptor protein on the cell-surface membrane can become permanently activated, so cell division constantly occurs
- The oncogene may code for a growth factor that is produced excessively
Result of oncogene formation
- Cells divide too rapidly and out-of-control
2. Development of tumours
Can proto-oncogenes be inherited
Yes, they can be inherited leading to a greater risk of tumour formation
What is a tumour-suppressor gene
Tumour-suppressor genes slow-down cell division, repair mistakes and tell cells when to die (apoptosis)
Role of tumour-suppressor genes
A normal tumour suppressor gene maintains normal rates of cell division and prevents the formation of a tumour
What can occur if a tumour-suppressor gene becomes mutated
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
Typical mutations of tumour-suppressor genes
Hypermethylation - increased methylation