Lecture 4: Cancer 1 Flashcards
What is cancer?
A group of diseases generally characterised by genomic instability and uncontrolled cell division and leading to invasion of surrounding tissue and eventual dispersion to distant sites.
Which cancers are the 4 main killers?
- large bowel
- breast
- prostate
- lung (smoking)
How many different cancers are there?
Over 200. You can get cancer in any cell type in your body, e.g. bone cancer
How might the karyotype from a cancer tissue differ to one from a healthy tissue/person?
The karyotype of the cancer-ridden tissue will have multiple/too many chromosomes or missing chromosomes.
What is a PAP test?
A cervical smear stain for proliferating cells. It is stained for proteins important in S phase (e.g. cdm6, mcm5), which indicate dividing cells, showing cervical cancer by turnover. This is much simpler than other testing methods and doesn’t require the tester to be highly trained.
How can a tumour form in an epithelial layer?
An epithelial layer is full of cells so there is no space for cells to divide into. The cells are constantly sending messages to the surrounding cells telling them not to divide. A cancer-causing cell will ignore these messages and divide anyway, causing a tumour to develop in the epithelial layer. Tumours grow in any space available to it and invade other tissues. This is way they can cause a bump.
What is metastasis?
When cancer cells escape their original position, via the circulatory system (bloodstream) and invades other tissues. This leads to tumours all over the body and is very difficult to treat. The cancer cells will accumulate in organs with a good blood supply, such as the lungs or liver. Most cancer cells won’t undergo metastasis, but some will.
Why do cells undergo metastasis?
When the cancer cell is in a tumour with many other cancer cells there is lots of competition between the cancer cells for nutrients, etc.
Cancer cells have an unstable genome, which allows them to evolve quickly to suit a niche. This means that if a cancer cell undergoes metastasis, it can find a new niche where there is no competition from other cancer cells, so the cancer cell can grow quickly there.
Cancer cells are motile, so they can move to find better conditions or more space to divide.
Why is it especially bad when an organ is riddled with many tiny tumours?
This can lead to organ failure and is very difficult to treat as the tumours are too tiny and numerous to be removed.
What is angiogenesis?
The generation of new blood vessels. Tumours can induce angiogenesis by secreting factors. The new chaotic (don’t need to be ordered) blood vessels supply the tumour with oxygen and nutrients and gives the tumour an escape route.
What are the differences between benign and malignant tumours?
Benign tumours have some cell proliferation, but it is contained within a small area and is not very sustained. There is insufficient genetic change to be a malignant tumour. However, benign tumours can become malignant tumours over time, so they are often removed just in case.
Malignant tumours are often the same size as benign tumours, but have more prolonged proliferation and have more cells in S phase. Malignant tumours are better at undergoing metastasis.
Give descriptions of 4 common types of tumour.
- carcinoma = epithelial cell derived (accounts for more than 85% of all cancers)
- lymphoma = cancer of lymphocytes
- leukaemia = white blood cell derived - leukocyte
- sarcoma = cancer of connective tissue or bone
What are the 3 main causes of cancer?
- Inheritance (e.g. selective breeding of poodles for cuteness has selected cancer genes too)
- Genetic change: Mutagens, irradiation, chemicals (largely responsible for most human cancers)
- Viral infection
How many breast cancer cases have a family history of cancer?
10%.
90% of breast cancer cases are sporadic (no family history or link to specific mutation in genome).
Give 4 types of mutation which constitute genetic change.
- Point mutation (single nucleotide change)
- Deletion
- Translocation
- Inversion