Tumorgenesis Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of hypertrophy?

A

Increase in cell SIZE in reaction to physiological or pathological stimulus
- Occurs in cells unable to divide
- Physiological examples: Skeletal muscle hypertrophy with training, increase in cell size in cardiac muscle
*REVERSIBLE → when the stimulus is gone, hypertrophy is reverted

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2
Q

What is the definition of hyperplasia?

A

Increase in the NUMBER of cell in response ot physiological or pathological stimulus
- Occurs in cells with a capacity to divide
- Physiological examples: Hyperplasia of epithelial cells in female breast during pregnancy, Liver regeneration
*REVERSIBLE → when the simulus is gone, hyperplasia is reverted (reversible even if happens from pathological stimulus)

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3
Q

What is the definition of neoplasia?

A

Neoplasm = new growth
Pathological disturbance of growth → excessive and unceasing proliferation of cells, indpendent of normal regulatory controls → IRREVERSIBLE
- Arises from genetic alterations → cells are not genotypically or phenotipically normal
- Neoplasms can be benign (not cancer) or malignant (cancer)

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4
Q

What is the definition of dysplasia?

A

Abnormal change in cell size, shape, organization

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5
Q

What defines a benign vs a malignant tumor?

A

Benign:
- Growth confined to a specific site, give no evidence of invading adjacent tissue
- Eptiehlial growth that has not penetrated throught the basement membrane —> NOT metastatic
- Mostly harmless
- Problems if they release high levels of hormones or in specific locations (brain)

Malignant:
- Aggressive growth that shows evidence of being locally INVASIVE
- Possibly metastatic

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6
Q

What are most (90%) of cancer-related deaths the result of?

A

They are the result of metastasis spawned from original primary tumours to bones, liver, brain, lungs, distant lymph-node, etc.
*Different cancers have preference metastasis spots

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7
Q

What are the characteristics of the tumour growth model?

A
  • Most human cancers develop over many decades of time → age is a large factor in the incidence of cancer
    ex: Lung cancer curve follows cigarette consumption curve, but with 10 years of delay

*Hypothetical, NOT actual → the population of cancer cells doubles at every division

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8
Q

What are important structure of the intestine for tumorgenisis?

A

*Well-documented in the epithelia of intestine (high rate of turnover)
Epithelia = site of most pathological changes associated with development of colon carcinomas
Basement membrane (basal lamina) = layer on which epithelia is anchored (separates capillaries from the epithelia)

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9
Q

What are the multiple steps of tumorgenesis for the metastatic colorectal cancer?

A
  1. Normal intestine epithelium → inactivation of APC TSG
  2. Dyplastic epithelium
  3. Early adenoma (benign) → activation of K-ras oncogene → intermediate adenoma (inactivation of TSG on 18q)
  4. Late adenoma → Inactivation of TP53 TSG = Bypass of senescence
  5. Carcinoma (malignant) → Inactivation of other tumor supressor genes
  6. Metastatic colorectal cancer (By-passed the basal membrane)
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10
Q

What is a carcinoma in situ?

A
  • Not a benign neoplasm, its a carcinoma (stage 0, just before actual cancer)

Has biological genotype and phenotype of a malignancy, but:
- Not invaded throught he basement membrane
- Cannot metastasize in its current state
- Considered «pre-malignant» or «pre-cancerous»
- Patient will be cured if completely removed/treated

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11
Q

What is epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT)? (general definition)

A

Cellular process during which epithelial cells (by downregulation of their features) acquire mesenchymal phenotypes
Cells have fibroblast-like morphology + increased migratory capacity

Normal epithelial cells = formation of a barrier, highly organized
After EMT → less organized, more capacity to spread out

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12
Q

What do core EMT changes include?

A
  1. Cytoskeletal remodeling
  2. Cell-cell adhesion weakening
  3. Acquisition of cell motility
  4. Basement membrane invasion
    *Change in gene expression pattern → genes associated with EMT are turned on
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13
Q

What are the steps of the invasion-metastasis cascade?

A
  1. Localized invasiveness enable in site carcinoma cells to breach the basement membrane
  2. Intravasation into lymphatic or blood vessel
  3. Blood vessels can transport cancer cells to distant sites
  4. Cancer cells colonize to form metastatic tumors
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14
Q

What is the importance of MET?

A

MET = mesenchymal to epithelial transition
Cells go through EMT to be able to metastasize, then MET to set camp elsewhere

Mesenchymal-like cells may:
- acquire apical-basal polarity
- reorganize their cytoskeleton
- exhibit increased cell-cell adhesion
Result = organized epithelium

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