LEC51: Properties of Cancer Cells; Senescence Flashcards
benign vs malignant
*clinical terms *
benign: cells that’re undergiong uncontrolled proliferation but that doesn’t manifest in disease
malignant: cells with unlimited cell renewal and result in what is generally considered to be cancer
primary cells?
cells w/ a finite lifespan, finite ability to grow, that are directly removed from the organism
immortalized cells?
cells with unlimited life span, capable of growing indefinitely
transformed cells?
immortalized cells that’ve gained some (lab-measurable) properties, including anchorage-independency or failure to stop growing upon contact w/ other cells - properties make it resemble a cancer cell
tumorigenic cells?
transformed cells that have ability to form a tumor
determine this by doing an assay for tumor formation
properties of cancer cells?
1) epithelial to mesenchymal morphology
2) altered metabolism
3) unlimited cell renewal; are immortal
4) anchorage independent
5) proliferate even when in contact w/ other cells
6) grow independent of growth factors
7) changes in ploidy
morphology of cancer cells?
changes from normal epithelial to mesenchymal, spindle-shaped, fibroblast cell type
appears refractile in light microscope due to cytoskeletal changes including actin depolymerization
how is cancer cell metabolism altered?
they rely on **glycolysis **for their ATP production, whereas normal cells use TCA cycle for ATP
why do cancer cells rely on an inefficient form of ATP production for their energy?
1) cancer cells grow in hypoxic environment; get their oxygen from glycolysis; have intrinsic property of enhanced glycolytic rate
2) use TCA cycle components to make amino acids, ntds, fatty acids that cancer cells need to make more of themselves
what is cancer cells’ potential?
unlimited
thus considered immortalized
how do normal vs cancer cells proliferate?
normal epithelial or mesenchymal cells require anchorage to proliferate; cancer cells are anchorage independent for growth b/c do not need to **activate the ERK pathway, upregulate Cyclin D, **in order to proliferate
what is “contact inhibition” re: normal vs. cancer cells?
epithelial cells are restrained in their growth when they come into contact with another cell
cancer cells lose contact inhibition; so they proliferate even when they are touching adjacent cells
growth factors’ importance to normal vs. cancer cells?
growth factors trigger the ERK pathway, lead to Cyclin D upregulation. normal cells need this for transcriptional upregulation of Cyclin D to enter cell cycle, divide
cancer cells grow in a manner independent of growth factors b/c can upreglate ERK pathway independent of Cyclin D
how does retinoblastoma circumvent growth factors for its growth?
*Rb normally prevents cell cycle progression by binding to E2F, preventing turning on of E2F target genes *
In retinoblastoma, a cell that mutates/loses Rb has an unrestrained E2F; so can do transcription absent of signaling
what is cancer cell re: ploidy?
aneuploid, could be gain or loss of genetic material due to deletions, gene amplification, chromosomal translocation
have something other than 4N