Final - Cancer Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

Oncogene

A
  • a dominantly acting gene involved in unregulated cell growth and proliferation
  • carried by viruses and associated with disease in animals
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2
Q

Tumor suppressor

A
  • genetic element whose loss or inactivation allows the cell to displace an alternate phenotype leading to neoplastic growth
  • oncogenic potential when gene activity is lost
  • recessive
  • gate keeper vs. care takers
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3
Q

Proto-oncogene

A
  • oncogenes in humans
  • have sequences that are similar to genes found in certain viruses
  • they are genes present throughout the genome structurally important “housekeeping” genes involved in cell proliferation and development
  • mutation in this gene converts it to oncogene-like which can lead to tumorgenesis
  • Dominant
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4
Q

Proto-oncogene vs. Tumor suppressor

- Proto-oncogene

A
  • change/ gain of function
  • dominant acting
  • regular / important genes that are inherited (mutation is aquired)
  • CML
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5
Q

Proto-oncogene vs. Tumor suppressor

- Tumor suppressor

A
  • loss of function
  • recessive acting (“two-hit”)
  • mutation can be inherited
  • retinoblastoma, breast/ovarian cancer, hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC)
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6
Q

Chronic myelogenous leukemia

A
  • translocation 9:22 = philidelphia chromosome
  • results in loss of proper regulatory control and thus an overproduction of tyrosine kinase (protein involved in cell cycle regulation)
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7
Q

Oncogene examples

A
  • H-ras
  • sis
  • abl
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8
Q

Gatekeeper gene example

A
  • Rb1
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9
Q

Caretaker gene example

A
  • BRCA1

- BRCA2

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10
Q

Cancer evolution

A
  • a combination of environmental and gene affects are needed for a normal cell to become cancer cells
  • there are multiple stages between normal and cancer in which multiple different mutations must occur (not necessarily in sequential order)
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11
Q

Inherited mutation

A
  • looking at the cancer evolution, a person wth a n inherited mutation is already one step closer to cancer and thus has one fewer mutations that is required
  • depending on the inherited mutation it may be easier for the mutation to occur
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12
Q

Inherited Cancer

A
  • most cancers are not inherited because the exact number of mutations needed to cause cancer is specific for different forms of cancer
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13
Q

Cytogenetics testing in the evolution of tumors

A
  • molecular diagnostics can allow direct detection or comparison to “normal”
  • karyotype and FISH can detect chromosomal anomalies associated with disease. Diagnosis, prognosis, monitor remission/relapse (Requires baseline)
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14
Q

FISH

A
  • flourescence in situ hybridization
  • a combination of cytogenetic and molecular technologies
  • uses a fluorescently labeled probe that hybridizes to a target sequence on the gene of interest
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