Radbio Flashcards
The early phases of fibrogenesis after irradiation can be characterized by an upregulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumor-necrosis factor-α (TNFα) and interleukins 1 (IL1); and what other cytokine?
A. IL2
B. IL6
C. IL10
D. IL15
B. IL6
Mechanistically, the early phases of fibrogenesis after irradiation can be seen as a wound-healing response characterized by an almost immediate upregulation of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumor-necrosis factor-α (TNFα), interleukins 1 and 6 (IL1 and IL6) and many growth factors in the irradiated tissue. Chemokines are released and these recruit inflammatory cells from the surrounding tissue into the irradiated volume. IL10 is potent anti-inflammatory cytokine. IL15 is involved in activation of immune cells.
Which DNA repair protein functions to promote DNA strand invasion and the search for homology during DNA DSB repair?
A. DNA-PK
B. Artemis
C. Rad51
D. MDC1
C. Rad51
Exposure of cells to ionizing radiation or radiomimetic drugs generates DNA double-strand breaks that are processed either by homologous recombination repair (HRR), or by canonical, DNA-PKcs-dependent non-homologous end-joining (C-NHEJ). RAD51 plays a major role in homologous recombination of DNA strand break repair. In this process, an ATP dependent DNA strand exchange takes place in which a template strand invades base-paired strands of homologous DNA molecules. RAD51 is involved in the search for homology and strand pairing stages of the process. Artemis is an endonuclease, a protein deficient in a human radiosensitivity syndrome associated with severe immunodeficiency (RS-SCID), in the processing of subsets of DSBs by HRR or C-NHEJ. It is thought that within HRR or C-NHEJ. DNA-PK is a key protein in NHEJ and MCD1 protein is a regulator of the Intra-S phase and the G2/M cell cycle checkpoints and recruits repair proteins to the site of DNA damage.
What protein inhibits Cyclin B/CDK1 interaction and inhibits the G2 to M transition after radiation damage?
A. Mdm2
B. Wee1
C. P21-CIP1
D. P27-KIP1
B. Wee1
Wee1 is a nuclear kinase belonging to the Ser/Thr family of protein kinases. Wee1 has a molecular mass of 96 kDa and it is a key regulator of cell cycle progression. It influences cell size by inhibiting the entry into mitosis, through inhibiting Cdk1. Wee1 is a tyrosine kinase that is known to be overexpressed in many cancer types such as luminal and HER2-positive breast cancer subtypes, hepatocellular carcinomas, and glioblastomas (Iorns et al., 2009). It regulates the G2-M transition by phosphorylating CDK2 to inactivate the CDK2/cyclin B complex to terminate the cell cycle. The G2 checkpoint is critical for premitotic DNA repair. P21 and P27 are proteins involved in regulating the G1/S phase transition; mdm2 is a protein involved with regulating activation of p53 and the G1/S transition.
Combining hyperthermia with radiation is considered a way of targeting cells in which phase of the cell cycle?
A. G1
B. S
C. G2
D. G0
B. S
The two principal rationales for applying hyperthermia in cancer therapy are that: (a) the S phase, which is relatively radiation resistant, are most sensitive phase to hyperthermia, and can be selectively radiosensitized by combining hyperthermia with x-irradiation; the cycling tumor cells in S phase which would normally survive an x-ray dose could thus be killed by subjecting these cells to hyperthermia. For heat shock during S phase, however, the damage in the chromatin is reflected as chromatid aberrations in all the chromosomes. These aberrations apparently induce cell lethality, just as do x-ray-induced chromosomal aberrations.
What chemotherapeutic agent leads to DNA chain termination when it becomes incorporated into newly synthesized DNA as the cell replicates?
A. Gemcitabine
B. Mitomycin C
C. Doxorubicin
D. Bleomycin
A. Gemcitabine
Mitomycin C (MMC) is a chemotherapeutic drug that requires an enzymatic bioreduction to exert its biological effects and then leads to Alkylation of DNA is the most favored mechanism of action for MMC, but other modes of action, such as redox cycling and inhibition of rRNA, may also contribute to the biological action of the drug. Plicamycin - RNA synthesis inhibitor. Bleomycin induces strand breaks in DNA. Doxorubicin in an intercalating agent that interacts with DNA by intercalation and inhibition of macromolecular biosynthesis to inhibit the progression of topoisomerase II, an enzyme which relaxes supercoils in DNA for transcription. Gemcitabine is a nucleoside analog, once gemcitabine has entered the cell is becomes phosphorylated and can masquerade as deoxycytidine triphosphate and is incorporated into new DNA strands being synthesized as the cell replicates which leads to “masked chain termination.”
What hypoxic cell sensitizer undergoes redox recycling or decomposes to toxic product and has shown efficacy in head and neck cancer?
A. Methotrexate
B. Camptothecin
C. Cetuximab
D. Nimorazole
D. Nimorazole
Nimorazole as a hypoxic radiosensitizer of primary radiotherapy in supraglottic larynx and pharynx carcinoma. Results of the Danish Head and Neck Cancer Study (DAHANCA) Protocol 5–85. (Radiother Oncol. 1998; 46:135–146) showed efficacy in hypoxic tumors. Cetuximab is an inhibitor of EGFR (ErbB family) has have shown to be effective in Head and Neck cancer: Camptothecin is a TOP I inhibitors (poison) involved in cleavage of DNA strands. Methotrexate is a Folic acid analog.
Which radiation injury can be evaluated by the crypt stem cell survival assay?
A. Sebaceous gland injury
B. Intestinal injury
C. Serous acini cell injury
D. Eccrine gland injury
B. Intestinal injury
The crypt stem cell survival assay (or microcolony assay) as developed by Withers and Elkind in 1970 is a gold standard to assess the surviving fraction of epithelial stem cells in the small intestine after exposure to high (≥8 Gy) doses of ionizing radiation. The number of surviving crypt stem cells correlates with radiation-induced structural damage in the intestinal wall.
What apoptosis-related protein promotes the induction of radiation-induced cell death?
A. Akt
B. Bax
C. Bcl2
D. mTOR
B. Bax
Bax is a pro-apoptotic protein involved in the induction of radiation-induced cell death. Akt, Bcl2 and mTOR promote cell survival.
What cellular event activates the ATM protein upon exposure to ionizing radiation?
A. Cell death
B. DNA double strand break formation
C. Mitochondrial respiration
D. Ribosomal assembly
B. DNA double strand break formation
ATM [Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated], one of the first proteins activated in response to DNA double strand breaks, coordinates several downstream signaling pathway to help the cell respond to the DNA damage.
The LD50/30 in an animal radiation model is 5 Gy. When animals are treated with a radiation protector, the LD50/30 is 10 Gy. What is the dose reduction factor of the radiation protector?
A. -5
B. 0.5
C. 2
D. 5
C. 2
The LD50/30 value is the radiation dose that leads to 50% survival 30 days after irradiation. The dose reduction factor can be calculated as the LD50/30 in the presence of the radiation protector divided by the LD50/30 value at baseline. Therefore, with the information given, the dose reduction factor is 10 Gy/5 Gy = 2.
What is the biological mechanism by which a superoxide dismutase mimetic protects against radiation injury?
A. By scavenging reactive oxygen species
B. By reducing the absorbed radiation dose
C. By promoting DNA repair
D. By inhibiting inflammation
A. By scavenging reactive oxygen species
Superoxide dismutase (SOD) mimetics reduce cellular oxidative stress, in part by acting as an SOD enzyme and scavenging reactive oxygen species.
During RT, a change in what microenvironmental condition can improve tumor control?
A. Decreased tumor oxygen levels
B. Decreased blood flow
C. Increased tumor glucose levels
D. Increased tumor temperature
D. Increased tumor temperature
Locally increased temperatures during radiation therapy (hyperthermia) radiosensitizes many solid tumors. On the other hand, decreasing tumor oxygen levels during therapy or decreasing radiation dose rate may reduce the radiation injury in tumors. Lastly, many tumors are glycolytic, and increased available glucose may promote their growth.
Which property of cancer stem cells impact tumor control probability (TCP)?
A. Most prevalent cell type
B. Unlimited proliferative capacity
C. More radiosensitive than other cell types
D. Confer a protective effect on adjacent cells
B. Unlimited proliferative capacity
Mathematical models of TCP are based on a fundamental assumption that tumors contain a population of stem cells that have unlimited proliferative potential that, therefore, must be killed in order to achieve sustained tumor control. Escape of even one stem cell can result in re-population due to this unlimited proliferative capacity.
What clinical intervention can reduce the therapeutic ratio of a radiation treatment?
A. Use of a radioprotector that accumulates preferentially in highly vascularized tissues
B. Use of a radioprotector that requires oxygen for conversion from pro-drug to its active form
C. Addition of a selective EGFR-targeted therapy, such as cetuximab
D. Addition of a cytotoxic alkylating chemotherapeutic agent, such as cyclophosphamide
D. Addition of a cytotoxic alkylating chemotherapeutic agent, such as cyclophosphamide
Alkylating agents are cytotoxic, targeting DNA, and tend to be cell-type non-specific. Such an agent would likely result in increased toxicity as well as increased tumor control. The other three responses take advantage of differences between the tumor and normal tissues with respect to molecular biology and/or microenvironment.
Why is prostate adenocarcinoma well-suited to hypofractionated RT?
A. Relative to other tumor types, prostate cancer has a high proliferation rate resulting in a large fractionation effect
B. Prostate tumors tend to by hypoxic, and hypofractionation increases reoxygenation compared to conventional fractionation
C. Prostate cancer tends to have a low capacity for repair between fractions, so fewer fractions helps to minimize repair over the course of treatment
D. The alpha/beta ratio of prostate cancer is low, resulting in a large fractionation effect relative to other tumor types
D. The alpha/beta ratio of prostate cancer is low, resulting in a large fractionation effect relative to other tumor types
The majority of prostate tumors are slowly proliferating, resulting in estimated alpha beta ratios of 1-3Gy; lower than other tumor types in which the alpha beta ratios are estimated to be ~8Gy or higher. These characteristics support hypofractionation to achieve higher doses that have been shown to improve tumor control with minimal increase in normal tissue toxicity.
How does increasing the number of fractions delivered to a late-responding tissue such as the kidney alter the isoeffective total dose curve?
A. Increases more rapidly than in an early responding tissue
B. Increases more slowly than in an early responding tissue
C. Unaffected by number of fractions
D. Total dose decreases
A. Increases more rapidly than in an early responding tissue
A late responding tissue like the kidney has a low alpha/beta ratio, resulting in a sharper bend in the survival curve (corresponding to a more rapid increase in isoeffective total dose) compared with an early responding tissue in which the alpha/beta ratio would be higher, resulting in a more gradual bend in the survival curve.
Which is a mechanism through which hypoxia has been shown to confer resistance to chemotherapy?
A. Activation of mTOR signaling
B. Induction of cell cycle arrest
C. Reduction in cellular adenosine levels
D. Reduction in autophagy
B. Induction of cell cycle arrest
Hypoxia within the tumor microenvironment is associated with cell cycle arrest, allowing the cells to survive in a dormant state and escape the cytotoxic effects chemotherapy.