Cancer Genetics Flashcards
What is cancer?
- All cancers derive from single cells that have acquired the characteristics of continually dividing in an unrestrained manner and invading surrounding tissues.
- Cancer cells behave in this abnormal manner because of changes in the DNA sequence of key genes, which are known as cancer genes. Therefore all cancers are genetic diseases.
What is a benign tumour?
•A benign tumor is a mass of well-differentiated cells that grows slowly, is capsulated and lacks the ability to invade neighboring tissue or metastasize
What is a malignant tumour?
•A malignant tumor is not self-limited in its growth (escapes apoptosis, is able to produce new blood vessels), cells are poorly differentiated and capable of invading into adjacent tissues, and may be capable of spreading to distant tissues (metastasis)
How can cancer begin?
-Multi step carcinogenesis
•Cancer may begin because of the accumulation of mutations involving oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes, and DNA repair genes.
What is an example of multi step carcinogenesis?
-Colon cancer can begin with a defect in a tumor suppressor gene (APC) that allows excessive cell proliferation.
-The proliferating cells then tend to acquire additional mutations involving DNA repair genes, other tumor suppressor genes (p53), and many other growth-related genes (K-ras).
•Over time, the accumulated damage can yield a highly malignant, metastatic tumor.
What is the microscopic appearance of cancer cells?
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What are carcinomas?
- the most common types of cancer arise from the cells that cover external and internal body surfaces.
- Lung, breast, and colon are the most frequent cancers of this type (epithelial)
What are sarcomas?
are cancers arising from cells found in the supporting tissues of the body such as bone, cartilage, fat, connective tissue and muscle
What are lymphomas?
are cancers that arise in the lymph nodes and tissues of the body’s immune system
are cancers of the immature blood cells that grow in the bone marrow and tend to accumulate in large numbers in the bloodstream
What causes cancers?
- Chemicals (e.g. from smoking) and radiation can damage genes (environment)
- Viruses can introduce their own genes into cells (exogenous factors)
- By heredity, alterations in genes that make a person more susceptible to cancer can be passed to the next generation (genetics – rare and common)
Genes are altered, or “mutated,” in various ways as
part of the mechanism by which cancer arises.
All lead to abnormal cellular regulation
What are leukaemia’s?
are cancers of the immature blood cells that grow in the bone marrow and tend to accumulate in large numbers in the bloodstream
What are the hallmarks of cancer?
- Deregulating cellular energetics
- Avoid immune destruction
- Genome instability
- Tumour-promoting inflammation
How do tumours evade the immune response?
- Tumour cells release tumour antigens
- Antigen-presenting cells gather tumour antigens and activate T cells
- Activated T cells target and eliminate cancer cells throughout the body
What are germline mutations?
- A gene change in a body’s reproductive cell (egg or sperm) that becomes incorporated into the DNA of every cell in the body of the offspring either before or during meiosis
- Germline mutations are passed on from parents to offspring. Also called a hereditary mutation
What are somatic mutations?
- Occur during mitosis anywhere in the body except reproductive cells (egg or sperm), also known as acquired or sporadic mutations.
- Will not be passed on
- These alterations can (but do not always) cause cancer or other diseases.
What are the different types of mutation?
- Deletions
- Duplications
- Inversions
- Translocations
- Single base substitutions (point mutations – silent, nonsense, missense)