Viral Oncogenesis Flashcards

1
Q

what is the process of developing tumors

A

oncogenesis

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2
Q

what is the main family of DNA viruses that may contain oncogenesis viruses

A

Herpes

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3
Q

what is the main family of RNA viruses that may contain oncogenic viruses

A

Retroviruses

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4
Q

when do DNA viruses produce tumors

A

during non-productive infections

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5
Q

true or false:
oncogenes from DNA viruses do not have cell homologs meaning they take the DNA from their cellular hosts

A

false
they do not have cell homologs meaning these DNA sequences are unique to viruses and are not derived from the host

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6
Q

what is any genetic element associated with cancer induction

A

oncogene

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7
Q

what are the 2 main groups of oncogenes

A

C-oncogenes
V-oncogenes

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8
Q

what are way viruses can cause cancer in a host

A

1) disregulation (up or down) of a C-oncogene
2) expression of a V-oncogene

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9
Q

which mechanism of oncogenecity is the direct path

A

V-oncogenes

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10
Q

which mechanism of oncogenecity is an indirect path

A

C-oncogenes

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11
Q

which oncogene is responsible for the introduction of new ‘transforming gene’ into the cell

A

V-oncogene

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12
Q

which oncogene is responsible for the alteration of expression of pre-existing cellular genes

A

C-oncogenes

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13
Q

what are the outcomes of oncogenecity

A

-loss of normal growth regulation processes
-affection of DNA repair mechanisms
-genetic instability

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14
Q

which oncogene exists in normal cells and are involved in regulation of cell growth, division / differentiation, ect.

A

C-oncogenes

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15
Q

what are some malfunctions proto-oncogenes can cause

A

-overproduction of growth factors
-no longer requiring growth factor binding
-factors always having to bind to their target gene promotor
-stimulation no longer needed to start growth / replication

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16
Q

what are the ways in which a C-oncogene can activate/ insert into a DNA strand

A

insertional mutagenesis
transposition
gene amplification
mutation

17
Q

true or false
there is no way for a virus to downregulate a cell

A

false
viruses can downregulate tumor suppressor genes such as P53 and retinoblastoma

18
Q

what is the function of P53 and retinoblastoma

A

control the cell cycle through apoptosis and genomic stability

19
Q

which oncogene resembles and acts as a growth factor receptor and hormone receptor

A

V-oncogene

20
Q

what normally controls V-oncogenes

A

LTRs

21
Q

what is the purpose / job of an LTR

A

it acts as strong promotor

22
Q

what are some mutations V-oncogenes may undergo

A

deletions
rearrangements for protein interactions

23
Q

what are the 2 mechanisms of retrovirus replication

A

replication defective
replication competent

24
Q

which retrovirus replication does not have all necessary genes because they are carrying a V-onc instead

A

replication defective retrovirus

25
Q

what is need with the replication defective virus to help the V-onc

A

coinfection with a second virus that will provide the missing product

26
Q

which retrovirus replication can complete their infectious cycle because they are carrying all necessary genes in their genomes

A

replication competent retroviruses

27
Q

true or false:
replication defective retroviruses will often need a replication competent retrovirus to assist

A

true

28
Q

true or false:
retrovirus v-oncogenes are essential for replication

A

false
they need help to replicate

29
Q

what are the mechanisms in which retroviruses produce tumors

A

transducing
cis-activation
trans-activating

30
Q

what does can cause dysregulation of an oncogene (up or down)

A

replication competent
cis-activation of a c-oncogene

31
Q

what can only cause up regulation due to high levels of v-oncogene expression

A

replication defective
transduction