Cancer Flashcards

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1
Q

Cancer

A
  • Group of diseases characterised by uncontrolled cell division and spread of abnormal cells
  • Dysregulation of checkpoints of cell division/cells escape cell cycle control mechanism
  • Tumour → genetically identical cells derived from a single mutant cell
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2
Q

Effects of gene mutation

A
  • Cell continues to divide when proto-oncogenes → oncogenes → tell cell to grow and divide more rapidly
  • Cell fails to stop uncontrolled cell growth → mutations in tumour suppressor genes
  • Cells make mistakes when repairing DNA errors → mutation in DNA repair gene
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3
Q

Causative factors of cancer (4)

A
  1. Environmental factors
  2. Loss of immunity due to infection with certain viruses
  3. Genetic predisposition
  4. Age
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4
Q
  1. Environmental factors
A
  • Exposure to carcinogens (eg. tar in cigarette smoke, asbestos etc.)
  • Ionising radiation (e.g. uv radiation, X-rays)
  • Cause mutations that lead to cancer
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5
Q
  1. Loss of immunity due to infection with certain viruses
A
  • HIV can weaken immune system and reduces body’s ability to fight infections by other viruses that can cause to cancer
  • E.g., Karposi’s sarcoma-associated Herpes virus genome can integrate into part of the human genome that controls DNA synthesis, or that affects cell division or that affects tumour suppression pathways and may lead to cancer
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6
Q
  1. Genetic predisposition
A

Due to gene mutations (in the germ cells) which we inherit from our parents (e.g. BRCA1 gene, a tumour suppressor gene)

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7
Q
  1. Age
A

Chances of getting cancer increases with age due to accumulation of mutations in a cell over a lifetime

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8
Q

Proto-oncogene

A
  • Normal cellular genes which codes for proteins
  • Stimulate normal cell growth and division
  • E.g. growth factors, growth factors receptors, transcription factors
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9
Q

Mutations of proto-oncogenes (2)

A
  • Proto-oncogenes → oncogenes (gain-in-function mutation (dominant))
  1. Increase in amount of gene products
  2. Increase in intrinsic activity
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10
Q
  1. Increase in amount of proto-oncogene’s gene products
A

a) Point mutation in base sequences of regulatory elements (e.g. stronger promoter created)
- ↑ frequency of transcription,

b) Gene amplification, where the number of copies of a proto-oncogene in a cell ↑ due to mistake during DNA replication
c) Chromosomal translocation such that the proto-oncogene ends up under the control of a enhancer

a-c:

  • Excess production of the proto-oncogene protein product (e.g. growth factor)
  • Uncontrolled cell division

d) Retroviral integration
i) Inactivate silencer
ii) Insertion of viral enhancer that upregulates
iii) Insert viral homologue of proto-oncogene

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11
Q
  1. Increase in intrinsic activity
A
  • Point mutation within proto-oncogene
  • Changes amino acid sequence of proto-oncogene protein (e.g. growth factor)
  • Becomes hyperactive or more resistant to degradation
  • uncontrolled cell division
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12
Q

Ras gene

A

Mutation in the ras gene results in a constitutively active Ras protein that irreversibly binds to GTP and increases cell division even in the absence of growth factors

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13
Q

Tumour suppressor genes

A
  • Codes for protein products that inhibit cell division and prevent uncontrolled cell division
  • By activating cell cycle arrest, DNA repair and/or apoptosis
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14
Q

Mutations of tumour suppressor genes

A
  • Loss-of-function mutation (recessive)
  • Mutations in promoter or coding sequence
  • Inactivation of protein products
  • Both copies of the allele need to be mutated for effects to be observed
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15
Q

p53 gene

A
  • Codes for, p53 protein, a STF (an activator) that can activate genes involved in:
    1. Cell cycle arrest: gives cell enough time to repair damaged DNA and prevent formation of mutant daughter cells
    2. DNA repair: prevents mutations that may lead to the formation of oncogenes or inactivated tumour suppressor genes
    3. Initiating apoptosis (programmed cell death) when DNA damage is beyond repair: remove cells with damaged DNA with the potential to cause cancer
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16
Q

Mutation in p53 gene

A
  • Defective p53 protein
  • Will not restrict cell growth and proliferation
  • Cell cycle continues without repairing DNA/does not undergo apoptosis
  • Mutations accumulate over time → ↑ risk of developing cancer cells
  • Mutations similar to proto-oncogenes
17
Q

Benign tumour

A
  • Mutations in several genes involved in regulation of cell growth, division and death
  • Big mass of cells that keeps dividing, growing and not dying
  • Localised and does not spread
  • Non-cancerous
18
Q

Malignant tumour

A
  • Benign tumour can transform into cancerous one
  • More mutations accumulate
  • Invasiveness (erodes normal surrounding tissue)
  • Metastasis (spread to other parts)
  • Primary → secondary tumours
19
Q

Why is development of cancer a multi-step process? (Part 1 - 4)

A
  1. The development of cancer requires the accumulation of mutations in the genes which control regulatory checkpoints of the cell cycle in a single cell
  2. This will disrupt the normal cell cycle, thus causing the cell to undergo excessive cell proliferation
  3. A gain-in-function mutation is a dominant mutation where mutation in just one allele of a proto-oncogene will result in its overexpression which will result in the production of excessive amounts of growth factors or hyperactive/degradation resistant growth factors leading to excessive cell proliferation
  4. Loss-of-function mutation is a recessive mutation where mutations in both alleles of a tumour suppressor gene will result in the non-functional/missing protein which will disrupt their ability to inhibit cell cycle, enable DNA repair and promote apoptosis
20
Q

Why is development of cancer a multi-step process? (Part 2 - 5)

A
  1. Activation of the genes coding for telomerase result in telomeres being lengthened allowing the cell to dividing indefinitely as the chromosomes are prevented from shortening with each DNA replication cycle. (A single cell that is immortal and continues to divide will accumulate more and more mutations)
  2. Loss of contact inhibition will enable the cells to grow into a benign tumour (mass of cells).
  3. Angiogenesis occur within the tumour so that the blood vessels formed can transport oxygen and nutrients for its growth.
  4. The presence of blood vessels can result in the formation of a malignant tumour capable of metastasising to other parts of the body via the bloodstream to form secondary tumours
  5. As it takes years to accumulate these mutations, the chances of developing cancer increases with age.
21
Q

Normal cells vs Cancerous cells (8)

A
  1. Nuclei (Low/high nuclei-cytoplasmic ratio)
  2. Genes (Proto-oncogenes/oncogenes, not mutated/mutated tumour suppressor genes)
  3. Cell division (Controlled/uncontrolled)
  4. Apoptosis (Undergoes/does not undergo)
  5. Contact inhibition (Yes/no)
  6. Differentiation (Yes/no)
  7. Cell adhesion/metastasis (Yes/no, no/yes)
  8. Angiogenesis (No/yes)