Tumors Flashcards
Tumors/Cancers/Neoplasms
uncontrolled division of abnormal cells in a part of the body
Benign
- remain in single location, not highly invasive
Malignant
spread by the blood or lymph to distant sites and/or aggressive local invasion
Carcinoma
arises from epithelial cells
Sarcoma
arises from mesenchymal cells
Leukemia
tumor cells int he blood (haemopoietic cells)
Hallmarks of cancer
- evading growth suppressors
- sustained proliferative signaling
- deregulating cell energetics
- avoiding immune destruction
-tumor promoting inflammation - genome instability and mutation
- enabling replicative immortality
- resisting cell death
- activating invasion and metastasis
- inducing angiogenesis
What causes DNA mutations?
- can be spontaneous
- Reactive oxygen species
- viral infections
- carcinogens
Cancer cell cycle control
- more than 50% of cancers have acquired mutations at p53 (tumour suppressing protein)
**Gene usually prevents uncontrolled division or growth - p53 checkpoints- when these aren’t working, too much division occurs
Tumour progression
- Avascular phase
- small lesions
-steady state between apoptosis and proliferation (dormant tumors) - Vascular phase
- exponential tumor growth in association with “angiogenic switch”
Tumour microenvironment
- tumours need amino acids, oxygen, lipids etc. to make it
- includes a collection of immune cells, endothelial cells, and fibroblasts that have unique metabolic features which allow them to manipulate their external environment to promote survival, proliferation, and immune evasion
Cancer cell secreting cytokines
TGFbeta
IL-1beta, IL-6, TNFalpha
VEGF
IL-10, TGFbeta, M-CSF, IL-35
TGFbeta
makes cancer-associated fibroblasts
IL-1beta, IL-6, TNFalpha
Creates migratory cancer cells (mesenchymal)
VEGF
Causes abnormal vessel growth
IL-10 or TGFbeta, (or M-CSF, IL-35)
- Turns off monocyte maturation (macrophages)
- Turns on Treg cells