8.1 Cell Cycle Control and Dysregulation Flashcards
What triggers cell division?
Mitogens
- proteins (e.g. EGF, FGF, VEGF, TGF-b)
- small molecules (e.g. ATP, adenosine)
What are the three phases and three checkpoints of the eukaryotic cell cycle?
G1 phase (growth)
S phase (DNA synthesis)
G2 phase (prep for mitosis)
G1 restriction checkpoint
G2 checkpoint
Metaphase checkpoint
What is cancer?
A group of diseases involving abnormal cell growth with the potential to invade or spread to other parts of the body
What are the main 5 types of cancer?
Carcinoma - epithelial cells
Sarcoma - connective tissue
Lymphoma - hematopoietic cells
Blastoma - immature precursor/embryonic cells
Germ cell tumour - pleuripotent cells
What is carcinogenesis
Formation of a cancer
Explain G0 and what regulates cell entry in G0
Non-proliferating cells are in G0
- terminally differentiated cells
- resting cells can exit
Regulated by:
- tumour supressor genes
- proto-oncogenes
What happens to the regulators of proliferation for cancer to occur?
Must have a mutation in both oncogenes and tumour suppressor genes
What do tumour suppressor genes do?
Encodes proteins that stop cells proliferating out of control (the brakes)
What do proto-oncogenes/oncogenes do?
Encodes proteins that promote growth, inhibit apoptosis, or both (the accelerator)
Proto-oncogene vs oncogene?
Proto-oncogene = normal gene that can become an oncogene
Oncogene = mutant form, results in lodd of regulation and ↑ protein expression
Explain the MAP kinase signaling cascade and the mutant proteins
Receptor - mutant ↑ activity = ↑ signalling
RAS - mutant unable to lyse GTP = permanently activated
Raf - mutant constitutively activates downstream molecules
What is p53 and what happens when it is mutated?
Part of G1 checkpoint
DNA damage = ↑p53 = halts cycle until repaired
Mutation = cells with damaged DNA proliferate and avoid apoptosis
Other properties of cancer cells (4)?
- evades apoptosis
- tissue invasion and metastasis
- overcome replicative senescence
- angiogenesis
Telomeres and cancer
Limit the number of times a cell can divide, cell senescence when telomeres are v short
Cancer cells express telomerase which adds telomeres back onto chromosomes for unlimited cell division
Describe angiogenesis of cancer
Tumour secretes VEGF which promotes growth of blood vessels towards tumour so it has its own blood supply