Lect 21 - Carcinogenesis: Molecular Hallmarks of Cancer Cells Flashcards

1
Q

how can carcinogenesis be modelled using a Darwinian process of natural selection

A

spontaneous replication errors in a cell population can give a selective growth advantage

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2
Q

what are caretaker genes?

A

Caretaker genes - maintain genetic stability by repairing damaged DNA and replication errors

Mutant forms of these genes cause genomic instability

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3
Q

what are the types of Tumour suppressor genes (TSGs)

A

GATEKEEPERS

CARETAKERS

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4
Q

what are GATEKEEPERS

A

Negative regulators of the cell cycle and proliferation
Positive regulators of apoptosis
Positive regulators of cell differentiation

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5
Q

what is the idea of a second hit?

A

as two copies of genes, two mutations are required to completely take out a TSG.

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6
Q

in terms of caner “hits” what is significant about familial cancer syndromes?

A

In the case of a familial cancer syndrome every cell in the individuals body will carry the first hit, meaning only one is required to inactivate a TSG.

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7
Q

what gene is affected in Familial breast cancer

A

BRCA1, BRCA2 (both care

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8
Q

what gene is affected in Hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer?

A

hMLH1, hMSH2 (both care)

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9
Q

what gene is affected in Familial adenomatous polyposis?

A

APC (gate)

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10
Q

what gene is affected in Li-Fraumeni?

A

p53 (gate AND care)

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11
Q

what gene is affected in Retinoblastoma

A

RB1 (gate)

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12
Q

what is the lifetime risk of a carrier of a familial cancer syndrome developing cancer?

A

70-90%

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13
Q

what are proto-oncogenes?

A

promote cell proliferation, survival, angiogenesis and negative regulation of apoptosis

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14
Q

what casues proto-oncogenes to become Oncogenes

A

mutations leading to activated versions or increased expression of proto-oncogenes

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15
Q

how can translocation activate an oncogene?

A

Translocation of a proto-oncogene from a low transcriptionally active site to an active site - aberrant expression of the oncogene

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16
Q

how can a point mutation activate an oncogene?

A

substitution of a single base pair can alter an amino acid in the protein causing it to become hyperactive

17
Q

how can amplification cause activation of an oncogene?

A

by insertion of multiple copies of an oncogene – increased expression

18
Q

how many genetic alterations are required to transform a normal cell into a neoplastic cell?

A

Minimum of 3. there will be loads before there are 3 important enough to cause neoplasm.

tumorigenesis has many many steps.

19
Q

what are the hallmarks of cancer cells?

A
self sufficient for growth signals
insensitive to antigrowth signals
tissue invasion and metastasis
limitless potential for replication
sustained angiogenesis
evasion of apoptosis.
20
Q

give an example by which cancer cells become self sufficient for growth signals

A

mutated RAS which is always active as it is unable to cleave phosphate from GTP to become inactive.

makes cell think there is GF around.

21
Q

how do cancer cells become resistant to negative growth factors

A

Inactivation of the RB gene

22
Q

what is the RB gene?

A

a key regulator of cell cycle by preventing progression from G1 to S phase.

23
Q

why are cancer cells immortal?

A

Tumour cells express telomerase that replaces the lost material and cells become immortal.

24
Q

why do normal cells have a limited lifespan?

A

After a number of cell divisions they die due to loss of DNA from the telomeres.

25
Q

which two genes are important in cancer cells avoiding apoptosis?

A

TP53 and P53.

26
Q

what does P53 do?

A

induces cell cycle arrest to allow repair of DNA damage, and causes apoptosis if damage is too great

27
Q

what does TP53 do?

A

codes for transcription factor that induces transcription of >100 genes.

TP53 inactivation leading to loss of apoptotic response is the most common genetic abnormality in human tumours

28
Q

what is angiogenesis

A

new blood vessels

29
Q

at what size do tumours need angiogenesis to get any bigger

A

2mm

30
Q

what growth factors are released by tumour cells to cause angiogenesis?

A

vascular endothelial growth factor

31
Q

what molecule that holds Epithelial cells together is lost in cancerous cells?

A

E-cadherin

32
Q

what does loss of E-cadherin cause?

A

epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)

allows cells to break through basement membrane and invade the underlying stroma

33
Q

what genetic testing can be used to estimate prognosis of cancers?

A

Gene expression profiling - for example subtypes with different translocations can be better or worse for outcome.

34
Q

give an example of a drug that can only be used in cancers expressing certain types of mutated receptors.

A

Herceptin is an antibody drug targeted to HER2 and dampens the effects of an overactive HER2 receptor

(HER2 (erbB2/neu) codes for a +ve growth factor receptor)