Molecular Basis of Breast Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

Two main gene defects identified in familial breast cancer

A

BRCA1 and BRCA2

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2
Q

BRCA1 mutations implications

A
  • Increases lifetime risk to 50-80%
  • ie not completely penetrant
  • Also increases ovarian risk to 40-50%
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3
Q

BRA1 mutation

A
  • Most result in truncated protein
  • Mutations occur throughout gene
  • 1863 amino acids
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4
Q

Why defects in BRCA1 predispose to cancer?

A

Knudson two hit hypothesis
- first hit is germline mutation
- second hit is somatic mutation
one copy is ok but when mutation occurs you have no working copy of the gene

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5
Q

What does BRCA1 do?

A

binds to RAD50-1

DNA repair

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6
Q

BRCA2

A
  • More than 400 mutations reported
  • Most result in truncated protein
  • Founder effect
  • Increases rick of prostate cancer in males and breast cancer in females
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7
Q

implications of a BRCA2 mutation

A

BRCA2 deficient cells are sensitive to DNA damaging agents

  • causes chromosomal defects
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8
Q

Homology directed repair of DNA double strand breaks

A

BRCA2 recruits RAD51 to sites of DNA damage
BRCA2 promotes nucleation of the RAD51 Filament
BRCA2 stimulates RAD51 - mediated strand exchange and D-loop formation

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9
Q

Other gene defects linked to familial breast cancer

A

SNPs

TP53

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10
Q

Implications for treatment

A
  • DNA damaging agents
  • DNA Double strand breaks
  • Replication fork stalling
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11
Q

Synthetic lethality

A
  • Two genetic mutations are independently compatible with life
  • BUT together cause mortality
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12
Q

PARP (Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase)

A

repairs SS DNA breaks

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13
Q

Oestrogen Receptor (ER) Positive Tumours

A

• Around 60% of tumours ER Positive

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14
Q

Hormone Therapy

A
  • Eg tamoxifen
  • Prodrug
  • Antagonist of Oestrogen receptor
  • Prevents expression of genes which would otherwise be stimulated by oestrogen
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15
Q

When is hormone therapy used

A
  • Often used prophylactically after surgery for early stage breast cancer
  • Common side effect- hot flushes
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16
Q

Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2 (HER2/erbB2) positive tumours

A
  • HER2/erbB2 over-expressed in 20-30% of tumours
  • Gene amplification
  • HER2/erbB2 over-expressed in 20-30% of tumours
  • Gene amplification
17
Q

Trastuzumab (Herceptin)

A
  • ‘Humanised’ monoclonal antibody to HER2 • Prevents signalling
  • Suppresses growth and angiogenesis
  • Cell mediated cytotoxicity
18
Q

Mitotic catastrophe

A

Stabilised microtubules
• Aberrant, multipolar spindles
• Chromosomes cannot segregate • Apoptosis