Cancer Flashcards
Comment on current trends in cancer incidence in Canada.
- Cancer is the #1 leading cause of death in Canada
- 2 in 5 Canadians will develop cancer in their lifetime
- 1 in 4 will die from cancer
- 5-year survival is ~64%
- Most common cancer in men is prostate
- Most common cancer in women is breast
- 2nd most common for both is lung and bronchus
- 3rd most common for both is colorectal
What is cancer?
- Uncontrolled cell growth (genetic mutations; epigenetic alterations in gene transcription)
- Spread of abnormal cells throughout the body (metastasis)
Comment on liver disease incidence in Canadians.
Describe the general
stages of cancer progression
- Initiation: ranges from minutes to days (short duration); cancer causing agent; no DNA repair, impaired regulation of apoptosis
- Promotion: may last months or even years; altered DNA leads to changes in gene expression, protein function etc; cell proliferates in uncontrolled way; alcohol, estrogen in breast tissue, Helicobacter pylori in the stomach, HPV in cervix may act as promoters
- Progression: malignant cells invade surrounding tissue and metastasize
Give examples of factors that may promote cancer. [4]
- Alcohol
- Estrogen in breast tissue
- Helicobacter pylori in the stomach
- HPV in cervix
Give examples of factors that may initiate cancer. [3]
- Chemicals
- Radiation (e.g., from the sun)
- Viruses
‘Cancer’ can refer to either a benign or malignant tumor.
True or False?
False.
Cancer only refers to malignant tumors.
‘Cancer’ only refers to malignant tumors, but not benign tumors.
True or False?
True.
‘Cancer’ only refers to benign tumors, but not malignant tumors.
True or False?
False.
Cancer refers to malignant tumors only.
Compare malignant and benign tumors.
- Benign (not cancer) tumor cells grow only locally and cannot spread by invasion or metastasis.
- Malignant (cancer) tumor cells invade neighbouring tissues, enter blood vessels, and metastasize to different sites.
Answer: B
These genes specifically are responsible to recognize that the cell is modified. When modifications are detected the cell is directed to repair and cannot undergo division.
Compare tumor supressor genes and oncogenes.
Tumor-suppressor: protect against cancer
Oncogenes: drive cancer development
Describe molecular changes in cancer. [5]
- Inhibition of tumor suppressor genes
- Activation of oncogenes
- Changes in signal transduction pathways
- Chromosomal rearrangements
- Genome instability
This all leads to uncontrolled cell growth and migration.
Give examples of genetic alterations that may lead to carcinogenesis. [3]
- Point mutations
- Polymorphisms
- Copy number variants
However, genetic predisposition may only account for 5-10% of risk.
For example, BRCA1 and BRCA2
Describe BRCA1 and BRCA2 mutations.
- Missing protein; non-functional
- Defective:
- DNA repair
- Transcription
- G2/M cell cycle checkpoint regulation
- Spindle checkpoint
How do we know factors other
than genetics contribute to cancer
risk?
- Japanese families that move to the US exhibit different cancer risk than Japanese families living in Japan.
Describe epigenetic changes that may lead to carcinogenesis. [3]
- DNA methylation
- Histone covalent modifications
- microRNAs
What is epigenetics?
“The study of heritable changes in the phenotype or gene expression caused by mechanisms other than changes in DNA sequences”
In genetics, gene sequence changes; in epigenetics, expression of genes changes = can lead to same outcome.
What are the three components of the epigenome?
- DNA methylation
- Histone modifications
- non-coding microRNA
What is DNA methylation?
- Refers to attachments of a methyl group to a cytosine group on DNA
Describe the effect of DNA methylation on gene activity.
Hypermethylation: silencing
Hypomethylation: activation
How is the landscape of DNA methylation visualized?
Oncogenes lose methylation (become activated); tumor suppressor genes gain methylation (become silenced)
How does nutrition impact the epigenome?
SAM, a methyl donor, requires micronutrients for de novo synthesis. Lack of these nutrients means that methylation cannot occur as normal.
List some bioactive compounds in vegetables and spices.
These impact the epigenome and therefore how the body functions.
What are the functional benefits of nutritional epigenetic effects? [6]
- Decrease in cell proliferation
- Decrease in cell migratory and invasive properties
- Inhibition of oncogenic signalling pathways
- Anti-oxidant role to prevent oxidative DNA damage
- Activation of pathways for detoxifying potential carcinogens
- Decrease in inflammatory response
What are most cancers related to?
- 80-90% of cancers are related to environmental factors (e.g., chemicals, radiation, viruses/bacteria, carcinogens in food, “poor diet”)
- These factors modify the structure and function of DNA leading to epigenetic aberrations