Lecture 5 - Cellular Oncogenes Flashcards

1
Q

Give three common examples of proto-oncogenes being converted in oncogenes (list three molecules).

A

1 - H-ras
2 - myc
3 - bcr-abl

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2
Q

Is it common for tumors to contain viruses? Give three examples.

A

NO, it is rare as few tumors contain viruses.

1 - Lymphoma
2 - Cervical cancer/oral cancer (HPV)
3 - Hepititis (liver)

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3
Q

What are endogenous retroviruses?

A

Endogenous retroviruses insert their genomes into that of the host and stay stilent for a period of time (transcriptionally silent) before being awakened and wreaking havoc.

  • Pass on genomically
  • Can spontaneously awaken (ex: leukemia)
  • Some carcinogens can cause cancer by activating them
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4
Q

How do researchers search for oncogenes in transformed cells? What is transfection and why is it great for cancer research? What does it prove? Give a step-by-step process of transfection.

A

Transfection: uptake of cancer DNA by healthy cells. Great because it works across species and tissues: human cancer DNA in a lab rat. Proves that viral presence is not required for tumor/cancer formation.

Process:
1 - Add small amount of cancer DNA to healthy cells
2 - if transformation occurs (no virus presence needed)
3 - Cell cluster forms (loss contact inhibition, proliferation)
4 - Inject morphologically changed/altered cells into healthy mouse host
5 - Tumor forms on host

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5
Q

What are some examples of oncogenes that are overexpressed in certain cancers? Give 2.

What is FISH? What does it do? How is it useful?

A

1 - HER2
2 - Cyclin D1

Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) is a process similar to a southern blot within a cell. Demonstrates level of expression of certain oncogenes within a cell.

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6
Q

Can oncogenes be accidentally overexpressed? How?

A

Yes, certain oncogenes can be accidentally overexpressed due to location (proximity to other genes) on the genome. Natural Cancer

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7
Q

How is the expression of proto-oncogenes controlled in normal cells vs. retroviruses?

A

In normal cells, the expression of proto-oncogenes is tightly regulated. In retroviruses, the expression of proto-oncogenes is under the control of the retroviral promoter

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8
Q

What is the ras family of oncogenes? How are they important?

A

The ras family of oncogenes is one of the most commonly activated oncogenes in human tumors. However, mutations leading to the activation of ras are usually limited to a few critical areas.

In essence, you really need to hit a very specific target with a mutation to activate ras.

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9
Q

How does the myc oncogene become activated? How is it important? Give 3 mechanisms through which this can occur.

A

The myc oncogene targets ~15% of genes in our genome. If overexpressed, myc can lead to the production of wayyyy too many proteins, leading to proliferation.

Myc activation can occur by:
1 - Viral promoter inserted before myc through provirus integration
2 - Multiple replications of the myc section of the genome by gene amplification
3 - Chromosomal translocation can join two genes, thereby altering them and activating myc

An example of the latter is Burkitt’s Lymphoma.

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10
Q

Give more detail concerning the activation of myc through chromosomal translocation.

How does a location switch for a gene also prevent it’s expression to be regulated?

A

During chromosomal translocation, the region coding for the myc gene can be transferred to a different region on the chromosome. This can cause myc overexpression by association based on the new location of the gene.

Furthermore, chromosomal translocations can inhibit proper gene regulation by miRNA.

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11
Q

Which two medical conditions contribute heavily to chromosomal translocation?

A

Chronic malarial infection and malnutrition

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