3- instability and repair Flashcards

1
Q

genomic instability

A

accumulation of unintended alterations to genomic sequences

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2
Q

genomic instability refers to an elevated _____

A

mutation rate

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3
Q

major forms of genomic instability

A
  1. gross chromosomal abnormalities
  2. subtle sequence changes (nucleotide instability)
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4
Q

what are examples of gross chromosomal abnormalities

A
  1. ploidy alterations
  2. gene amplification
  3. chromosomal structural alterations
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5
Q

examples of subtle sequence changes

A

1.point mutations
2. microsatellite instability

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6
Q

how do chromosomal abnormalities and mutations arise? AKA genomic instability causes

A
  1. spontaneous events
  2. intrinsic stresses
  3. extrinsic stresses
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7
Q

what are some consequences to damaging dna

A
  1. cell cycle arrest
  2. apoptosis
  3. cancer
  4. aging
  5. inborn disease
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8
Q

what the dna repair mechanisms

A
  1. double stranded dna break repair
  2. nucleotide excision repair
  3. base excision repair
  4. mismatch repair
  5. cell cycle checkpoints
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9
Q

DSB is produced by

A

free radicals , various chemicals, replication across single stranded DNA breaks

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10
Q

what are the 2 mechanisms for DSB repair

A

non homologous end joining
homologous recombination

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11
Q

characteristics about non homologous end joining

A

-potentially error prone
-critical for immunoglobulin gene rearrangement
-limited links to cancer

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12
Q

characteristics about homologous recombination

A

-precise
-highly conserved
-core factors: essential
-accessory factors: linked to disease

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13
Q

how does excision repair work

A
  1. recognition of damage
  2. removal of ssDNA containing lesion
  3. repair replication across gap
  4. ligation of the repaired strand
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14
Q

what are the lesions of nucleotide excision repair

A

bulky, helix distorting damage

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15
Q

what are the lesions of base excision repair

A

small base alterations

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16
Q

mech of base excision repair

A

-damaged base is flipped out of helix and cleaved
-recognized by endonuclease that cleaves the backbone
-polymerases can repair the site

17
Q

lesions of mismatch repair

A

mismatches, insertion/deletion loops

18
Q

mech of mismatch repair

A

lesions are identified by complexes and then additional factors are recruited to the damage site. the defective sequence is excised and DNA is resynthesized using the intact strand

19
Q

cell cycle checkpoints=

A

dna damage checkpoints

20
Q

cell cycle checkpoints function

A
  1. sense and respond to the presence of DNA damage by arresting cell cycle progression
  2. monitor and ensure completion of major cell cycle events
21
Q

the mitotic spindle checkpoint ensures that

A

chromosomes are properly aligned on the metaphase spindle before chromosome segregation

22
Q

DNA damage checkpoints respond to

A

genome damage by arresting cell cycle progression and promoting DNA repair

23
Q

dna damage signal cascade

A

signal–> sensor –> transducers –> effectors –> cell cycle arrest/DNA repair/replication fork stabilization

24
Q

cancer cells appear to be highly dependent on

A

stress response mechanisms

25
Q

activated oncogenes stimulate ____ leading to DNA damage

A

hyperproliferation

26
Q

cancer cells are susceptible to certain drugs that target

A

stress response pathway

27
Q

senescence

A

DNA damage response to shorted telomeres

28
Q

what is Ames test

A

a test to determine the mutagenic activity of chemicals by observing whether they cause mutations in sample bacteria
-tests carcinogenicity

29
Q

what type of mutations are oncogenes

A

homozygous dominant or recessive

30
Q

how do cancer cells achieve immortality

A

cancer cells keep high levels of telomerase, an enzyme that prevents telomerase shortening
-this gives the ability of the chromosomes to continue to replicate forever