Tumour Suppressor Genes Flashcards
What is the function of tumour suppressor genes?
To negatively regulate growth by arresting growth or inducing apoptosis.
Why are tumour suppressor genes said to be recessive in cancer?
What is this hypothesis known as?
- Because both alleles of a tumour suppressor gene must be lost to lose tumour suppressor properties.
- This is known as Knudson’s two-hit hypothesis.
Why does familial tumour suppressor loss (e.g. with familial retinoblastoma) often result in bilateral disease, whereas somatic tumour suppressor loss often results in unilateral disease (e.g. with somatic retinoblastoma)?
- If the tumour suppressor loss in a particular tissue is familial, the individual is born with one mutated tumour suppressor gene, and the other must be lost by one more somatic mutation in order for tumour suppressor function to be lost.
- Since the gene is inherited in both tissues (bilaterally, e.g. in the eyes), familial cancers are more likely to develop bilaterally than unilaterally.
- In contrast, an individual that is not born with one mutated tumour suppressor gene must develop two somatic mutations in order for tumour suppressor function to be lost.
Other than developing bilaterally, give another distinguishing characteristic of familial cancer.
Early onset.
List 2 signs of retinoblastoma.
1 - White light reflection.
2 - Strabismus (cross-eyed).
List 2 treatments of retinoblastoma.
1 - Chemotherapy.
2 - Laser therapy.
What type of mutation is the most common cause of familial retinoblastoma?
Single base substitutions.
What degree of penetrance is shown by retinoblastoma?
- Most mutations are associated with almost complete penetrance (the autosomal dominant genes).
- Rare alleles show incomplete penetrance.
- Although the inheritance of the mutation is dominant, remember that both genes must be lost in order for tumour suppressor function to be lost.
Which gene is affected to cause loss of tumour suppressor function in retinoblastoma and osteosarcoma?
RB1.
List 2 ways by which the second mutation can come about in familial and somatic retinoblastomas to cause loss of tumour suppressor function.
1 - There can be a mutation to the second gene, causing hypermethylation of the 5’ region of the nucleotides of the RB1 gene.
2 - There can be loss of heterozygosity, which can be a result of mitotic recombination, mitotic nondisjunction or large deletions.
*The second point here isn’t specific to retinoblastomas.
What does the RB1 gene code for?
How does its protein product work as a tumour suppressor protein?
- The RB1 gene codes for pRB.
- pRB must be phosphorylated at the restriction point between G1 and S phase in order for the cell cycle to continue:
- pRB is a transcription factor that represses transcription by repression of E2F transcription factors.
- pRB is also bound to HDAC, which antagonises the transcription-priming function of p300.
- Early phosphorylation is mediated by the cyclin D - cdk4 / 6 complex. Phosphorylated pRB dissociates from HDAC, enabling transcriptional priming by p300.
- Late phosphorylation is mediated by the cyclin E - cdk2 complex. Hyperphosphorylated pRB dissociates from the gene, driving transcription necessary for progression into S phase.
Give an example of a treatment for loss of tumour suppressor function.
Cdk inhibitors.
What is p16ink4a?
What is its function?
- A tumour suppressor that is expressed in response to cellular stresses that is inactivated in human cancer.
- It prevents cdk4 and cdk6 from phosphorylating pRB, causing growth arrest.
Which cancer is associated with a mutation in p16ink4a?
Familial melanoma.
List 4 tumour suppressor functions of p53 transcription factor.
1 - Promotion of proapoptotic activity.
2 - Promotion of growth-arresting activity.
3 - Promotion of cellular senescence.
4 - Inhibition of angiogenesis.