Genetic Predisposition to Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

What are somatic mutations?

A

Occur in nongermline tissues

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2
Q

What are germline mutations?

A

Mutations in germ cells - responsible for producing eggs and sperm. Heritable, cause cancer family syndromes

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3
Q

What is the function pf proto-oncogenes?

A

Codes for proteins that regulate cell growth and differentiation

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4
Q

What is an oncogene?

A

Mutated proto-oncogene

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5
Q

what is the effect of oncogenes?

A

Accelerate cell division

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6
Q

How many mutations of the chromosomes are needed before control of the cell cycle is lost in oncogenes?

A

1 mutation needs to occur

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7
Q

What is the function of tumour suppressor genes?

A

Slow down cell division
Repair DNA mistakes
Tell cells when to die (a process known as apoptosis or programmed cell death)

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8
Q

What is the function of DNA damage response genes?

A

The repair mechanics for DNA

Cancer arises when both genes fail, speeding the accumulation of mutations in other critical genes

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9
Q

What is the function of Mismatch repair genes?

A

MMR corrects errors that spontaneously occur during DNA replication like single base mismatches or short insertions and deletions

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10
Q

What does Micro satellite instability an indicator of?

A

Phenotypic evidence that MMR is not functioning normally.

Cells with abnormally functioning MMR tend to accumulate errors, simple sequence repeats are created

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11
Q

Give an example of a cancer syndrome associated with Oncogenes

A

MEN2 (Multiple endocrine neoplasia)
Familial medullary thyroid cancer

Can be caused by viruses

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12
Q

Give an example of a cancer syndrome associated with Tumour suppressor gene

A

Breast/ovarian cancer FAP Li-Fraumeni syndrome Retinoblastoma

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13
Q

Give an example of a cancer syndrome associated with DNA repair (mis-match repair)

A

HNPCC / Lynch Syndrome

(Hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer)

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14
Q

What are other causes of cancer?

A

Autosomal recessive syndromes
E.g. MYH polyposis

Multiple modifier genes of lower genetic risk

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15
Q

What is a De Novo mutation?

A

New (de novo) mutation occurs in germ cell of parent
No family history of hereditary cancer syndrome

A new mutation in a germ cell?

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16
Q

Describe cancer susceptibility genes

A

They are dominant with incomplete penetrance

17
Q

Is heritable retinoblastoma usually bilateral or unilateral?

A

Usually bilateral

18
Q

Does heritable retinoblastoma usually contain a family history?

A

Yes in 20 percent of cases

19
Q

What are the risk factors of breast cancer?

A

Ageing, family history, Early menarche - first period, late menopause, Nulliparity -not having children
Estrogen use, dietary factors, lack of exercise.

20
Q

What are the common genes responsible for breast cancer?

A
BRCA1
BRCA2
TP53
PTEN
Undiscovered genes
21
Q

What is the function of BRCA1?

A

Checkpoint mediatorDNA damage signalling and repairChromatin remodelling (inactive X chromosome)Transcription (not essential for this)

(PROTEIN THAT ACTS AS A TUMOUR SUPPRESSOR)

22
Q

What is the function of BRCA2?

A

DNA repair by HR (homologous recombination)

23
Q

What are the BRCA1 associated cancers?

A

Breast cancers, second primary breast cancer

Ovarian cancer

24
Q

What are the BRCA2 associated cancers?

A

Breast cancer, ovarian cancer, male breast cancer

Increased risk of prostate, laryngeal, and pancreatic cancers (magnitude unknown)

25
What are risk factors for colorectal cancers?
``` Ageing Personal history of CRC or adenomas High-fat, low-fibre diet Inflammatory bowel disease Family history of CRC ```
26
What is the sequence of events for Adenoma to carcinoma?
Epithelium becomes hyperactive, adenoma forms, carcinoma forms
27
How many adenomas are present in non-polyposis (Hereditary Colorectal Cancer (CRC) syndromes)
few to no adenomas HNPCC (hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer / Lynch Syndrome) - CRC &/or endometrial cancer (EC
28
How many adenomas are present in polyposis (Hereditary Colorectal Cancer (CRC) syndromes)
(multiple adenomas) FAP – severe colonic polyposis +/- CRC AFAP - less severe colonic polyposis +/- CRC MAP – varying degrees of colonic polyposis +/- CRC FAP – familial adenomatous polyposis AFAP – attenuated FAP MAP – MYH associated polyposis
29
What are the clinical features of HNPCC
Early but variable age at CRC diagnosis (~45 years) Tumor site throughout colon rather than descending colon Extracolonic cancers: endometrium, ovary, stomach, urinary tract, small bowel, bile ducts, sebaceous skin tumors
30
What are clinical features of FAP?
Estimated penetrance for adenomas >90% Risk of extracolonic tumors (upper GI, desmoid, osteoma, thyroid, brain, other) CHRPE may be present Untreated polyposis leads to 100% risk of cancer
31
Describe the effect of attenuated FAP
``` Later onset (CRC ~age 50) Few colonic adenomas Not associated with CHRPE Upper GI lesions Associated with mutations at 5' and 3' ends of APC gene ```
32
What condition is similar to attenuated FAP?
Recessive MYH polyposis Common mutations in mut- MYH gene
33
What can Multiple modifier genes explain?
May explain families with history of cancer and no identified mutation May explain differences in cancer penetrance in families with same mutation
34
How can you manage caner risk in Adenomatous Polyposis syndromes?
Surveillance Surgery Chemoprevention
35
What portion of cancers are due to inherited mutations?
Only a small portion