Tumour Pathology 5 COPY Flashcards

1
Q

What do tumour-supressor genes normally do?

A
  • Negatively regulate mitosis (Rb gene)
  • Regulate Apoptosis (p53)
  • Regulate DNA repair (p53)
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2
Q

What do proto-oncogenes do?

A

Code for proteins that regulate normal growth.
(growth factors & receptors)

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3
Q

How does the Rb gene -ve regulate mitosis?

A

Rb gene codes for pRb
E2F promotes DNA synthesis
-> pRb deactivates E2F

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4
Q

What other mutations can mimic pRb loss?

A
  • Mutations activate Cyclin D or CDK4
    (complex phosphorylates & deactivates pRb)
  • Mutation inactivates CDK inhibitors
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5
Q

What does Cyclin D/CDK4 complex normally do?

A

Phosphorylates/deactivates pRb
Allows E2F to promote cell division

[Occurs when external stimuli signal for mitosis to occur]

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6
Q

Another name for Tumour-Supressor genes?

A

Anti-Oncogenes

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7
Q

whats the two-hit hypothesis:?

A

Two mutations are required to inactivate tumour-suppresor genes

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8
Q

What are the two forms of oncogenesis? (mutation to anti-oncogenes)

A

Sporadic
Inherited

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9
Q

Explain inherited oncogenesis:

A
  • Inherited one defective Rb gene
  • Other copy undergoes somatic point mutation
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10
Q

Explain sporadic oncogenesis?

A

Mutations occur in both genes in a single cell (i.e not inherited)

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11
Q

Whats the difference between an inherited cancer syndrome and a familial cancer?

A

Inherited Cancer syndrome:
- Strong family histroy of unusual cancers
- Autosomal Dominant inheritance of a single mutant gene

Familial Cancer:
- Family cluster of cancers
- Multifactorial inheritance
- Individual predisposition is unclear

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12
Q

Examples of inherited cancer syndromes?

A

Familial Retinoblastoma
FAP
Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia

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13
Q

Examples of Familial Cancers:

A

Some breast or ovarian cancers

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14
Q

How can an proto-oncogene become an oncogene?

A

Altered structure by mutation
Dysregulation of gene expression, amplification/over-expression

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15
Q

What do oncogenes code for?

A

Oncoproteins:

Growth factors, nuclear regulatory proteins, cell cycle regulators etc

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16
Q

What are the mechanisms of viral carcinogneneiss?

A
  • Retrovirus inserts oncogene into host DNA
  • Viral promoter causes pro-oncogene over expression
17
Q

Examples of DNA viruses known to cause cancer?

A

HEP B - Liver Cancer
Herpes (epstein-barr specifcally) - Burkitt Lymphoma
HPV - Cervical Cancer

18
Q

Mechanism of chemical carcinogenesis:

A

Chemical reacts with DNA to form DNA adducts
DNA adducts at particular chromosome sites cause:
-Oncogene activation or tumour-supressor gene deactivation

19
Q

What kind of mutations occur in most cancers?

A
  • Activation of several oncogenes
  • loss of 2 or more anti-oncogenes
20
Q

Stages of carcinogenesis:

A
  • Normal Cell
  • DNA damage
  • Genomic mutation
  • Oncogene activation/anti-oncogene deactivation
  • Dysregulation
  • Tumour progression
  • Malignant Neoplasm