Oncogenes and Tumour Suppressor Genes Flashcards
Which distinct genetic changes are involved in tumour development?
Activation of oncogenes (from proto-oncogenes) and inactivation of tumour suppressor genes
What is a proto-oncogene?
A normal gene that becomes an oncogene after being mutated - usually promotes cell growth.
What is an oncogene?
A protein coding gene, that when activated/overexpressed/mutated has the potential to promote oncogenesis. Accelerator of a car that gets stuck.
What is oncogenesis?
The process by which healthy cells become transformed into cancer cells
What is an oncovirus?
A cancer causing virus
What is a retrovirus?
An RNA virus which produces dsDNA copies of their genome that integrate into the host cell chromosome.
How are retroviruses grouped?
On their structure and replication method within the host
What is a tumour suppressor gene?
A protein coding gene that can slow cell growth/division, repair DNA mistakes and promote appropriate apoptosis. Absence/repression/inactivation of the gene can promote oncogenesis. Brakes of a car that don’t work.
What type of mutations occurs in tumour suppressor genes?
Loss of function mutations (inactivation) - usually “reccessive” ie. two copies of the mutation needed to cause cancer.
Describe the two hit hypothesis
As loss of function mutations are “reccessive”, two hits are needed to cause cancer. A child with an inherited mutation is more likely to get cancer as they only need one extra “hit” - patients usually younger and have multiple tumours. A child with no inherited mutations is less likely to get two hits in the same gene, as a result the patients are older and only have one tumour usually.
How common is inheritance of tumour suppressor gene mutations?
They’ve been found in some familial cancers, causing them to run in the family. APC gene mutations are associated with increased colon cancer risk in people with familial adenomatous polyposis. Most tumour suppressor gene mutations aren’t inherited but acquired - acquired TP53 mutations been found in >50% of human cancers
What are the two main cellular functions of tumour suppressor genes?
Caretakers and gatekeepers
Describe the caretaker function of tumour suppressor genes
They maintain chromosomal integrity (genome stability). Includes DNA repair genes eg. TP53 -> p53 which also has gatekeeper properties
Describe the gatekeeper function of tumour suppressor genes
Negative regulation of cell cycle. Inhibition of proliferation, induction of apoptosis, inhibition of angiogenesis. eg. Retinoblastoma protein
What is retinoblastoma?
A rare cancer usually affecting children under 5. Starts in the light sensitive lining in the retina and can occur in one or both eyes. Affects 50-60 kids in the UK per year. If caught early, 95% treatment success but metastasis can be fatal.
What are the causes of retinoblastoma?
40% of cases - mutations in RB1 gene, usually presenting as bilateral retinoblastoma. Mutations can be inherited or acquired in the womb during early development. One functional copy of RB1 gene produces sufficient RB protein.
60% of cases - Unknown causes, no mutant gene. Usually unilateral
How does RB protein function?
When a cell reaches the G1 checkpoint, E2F (a TF) lets S phase proceed. RB protein inactivates E2F by binding to it and not allowing the cell cycle to proceed (stops replication. RB protein is inactivated by phosphorylation, so S phase proceeds. Mutant RB protein cannot bind to E2F regardless of phosphorylation state, so S phase always proceeds - uncontrolled replication.
How can tumour suppressor genes also act in a dominant manner?
In terms of causing cancer, tumour suppressor genes are recessive in that two mutations are required. But in terms of causing predisposition to cancer, they are dominant, as an inherited mutation makes cancer more likely to occur