Topics A58-62. Neoplasm 2: Oncogenes, Tumor Suppressor Genes, DNA Repair, Telomeres, Epigenetics, Genetic Cancers Flashcards
What are the 4 things that can be genetically altered which relate to cancer development?
- Oncogenes
- Tumor suppressor genes
- DNA repair genes
- Telomer and telomerase
What is the difference between a protooncogene and an oncogene?
Protooncogene: normal gene that produces proliferatory signaling molecules to help the cell grow. The production is coordinated, can turn on and off
Oncogene: mutated form of a protooncogene that functions autonomously, overproducing the normal growth-promoting signals
What are the 4 types of mutations to know related to oncogenes?
- Point mutation / Deletion / Insertion
- Translocation: Promoter Exchange
- Translocation: Fusion gene. (Breaking in the exons -> fusion of 2 genes -> new hybrid gene -> new protein)
- Gene amplification: Everything is fine, but just coding unusually high amount
What is an example of point mutation creating an oncogene?
EGFR: Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor. Importantly controls cell growth and proliferation, allows MAPK, STAT, and AKT.
With oncogenic mutation, the intracytoplasmic domain mutates -> continuous cell prolferation, transcription, and cell cycle progression
What is an example of promoter exchange in oncogene formation?
BCL2 protooncogene: BCL2 is normally an anti-apoptotic protein. BCL2 protein blocks apoptosis by forming heterodimer with BAX/BAK
Chromosome 18 is Ig heavy chain gene, and chromosome 14 where BCL2 is coded.. they break and form a hybrid where BCL2 is coordinated by enhancer/promoter of Ig heavy chain gene.
What is an example of gene fusion in oncogene formation?
t(9:22) translocation: “Philadelphia chromosome” - Breakpoint Cluster Region (BCR) is on chromosome 22, fuses with 9 -> chronic myeloid leukemia
Fusion gene activates JAK-STAT, SRC, RAS etc all cell proliferation, plus suspends BCL2 activity in blocking apoptosis
What is an example of gene amplification?
What are 2 ways that gene amplification may appear / be physically manifested?
HER2 is amplified in 30% of breast cancers. HER2 is an epidermal growth factor-like receptor (EGFR)
May see extended chromosome regions, or see small aggregates of extrachromosomal DNA called “double minutes”
What is the double-hit theory (of Knudson)?
Because we have two alleles, just one mutating is not usually enough to be a problem. Have to have a “double hit” - both alleles mutated. Usually one allele is inactive from hereditary cause, and then the other one is mutated sporadically (point mutation etc). First mentioned for retinoblastoma.
Doesn’t apply to oncogenes, but it does apply to tumor suppressor genes
What are tumor suppressor genes?
Genes that encode proteins that inhibit cellular proliferation, for example by regulating the cell cycle
What are the 5 ways that tumor suppressor genes can be mutated/inactivated?
- Loss of Heterozygosity (LOH): both alleles inactivated
- Point mutation/deletion: causes stop codon, missense etc
- Hypermethylation: epigenetic inactivation of promoter region
- Transdominant gene: mutant gene complexes with non-mutant one, but silences the protein
- Haplo-insufficiency: one allele is silenced, and the other is too weak / insufficient. Need product of both alleles to work.
How does the retinoblastoma (RB) tumor suppressor gene work?
Which tumors is RB silencing implicated in?
RB binds to E2F nuclear transcription factor when it’s unphosphorylated, preventing transcription. If RB is deleted, then E2F is free to transcribe uncontrolled.
(This is in G1/S checkpoint regulation. CDK4,6 binds to cyclin D, the complex phosphorylates RB and frees E2F to promote transcription)
Retinoblastoma, osteosarcoma from hereditary neoplasms, but RB sporadic mutation involved in breast, colon, and lung cancer (remember additional mutations must also be present)
What is p53 normally linked to?
What happens to p53 if there is a mutation detected in the cell? (3 things)
Normally linked to MDM2, without that it’s degraded quickly.
If there is a detected mutogenic effect, p53 is activated and then activates other genes:
- Genes for DNA repair
- Genes that stop cell cycle (like RB)
- If it can’t be repaired, activates genes that initiate apoptosis (BAX, APAF1)
Hereditary mutation of the APC gene is involved in which cancer?
What is the mechanism?
Adenomatosus polyposis coli
β-Catenin Pathway: APC and β-Catenin are together in the “destruction complex” - blocks the activation of cell proliferation signal transcription. If there is WNT signal, β-Catenin separates and forms new complex that promotes transcription.
Mutation of APC in adenomatosus polyposis coli: there is then no downregulation of β-Catenin, so it continues to promote transcription that activates the cell cycle -> colon cancer
What are 3 types of DNA repair from lecture? (There are others though)
- Mismatch repair: if opposing nucleotide is incorrect (not A-T, C-G)
- Nucleotide Excision Repair: usually repair of thymidine dimers
- Double-break DNA Repair
What are the proteins that perform mismatch repair?
MSH2-MSH6 or MSH2-MSH3 proteins
Colon, GI tract cancers are common from mutations of these proteins