Cancer Flashcards

1
Q

What are acquired mutations?

A

Mutations that occur in individual cells after fertilisation

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2
Q

What is a tumour?

A

A mass of abnormal cells

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3
Q

How can acquired mutations cause a tumour?

A

If they occur in the genes which control the rate of cell division, it can cause uncontrolled cell division

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4
Q

What are cancers?

A

Tumours that invade and destroy surrounding tissue

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5
Q

What two genes control the rate of cell division?

A

Tumour suppressor genes

Proto-oncogenes

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6
Q

How does a tumour suppressor gene work?

A

Slows cell division by producing proteins that stop cells-dividing or cause them to self destruct

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7
Q

What happens if there is an mutation in the tumour suppressor gene?

A

The gene will stop producing the proteins as the gene will become inactivated. The cells divide uncontrollably

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8
Q

How does a proto-oncogene work?

A

They stimulate cell division by producing proteins that make cells divide

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9
Q

What happens if there is a mutation in the proto-oncogene?

A

The gene will become overactive and stimulate cells to divide uncontrollably, resulting in a tumour

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10
Q

What is a oncogene?

A

A mutated proto-oncogene

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11
Q

What is apoptosis?

A

Programmed cell death which happens to cells that are infected, damaged or have reached the end of their functions life

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12
Q

What are the two types of tumour?

A

Benign

Malignant

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13
Q

What are malignant tumours?

A

Cancers

They grow rapidly and invade and destroy surrounding tissues

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14
Q

What are benign tumours?

A

Not cancerous

They usually grow slower and are often covered in fibrous tissues that stop cells invading other tissues

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15
Q

What can benign tumours sometimes become?

A

Malignant

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16
Q

How are tumour cells different to normal cells?

A
  • Their nucleus is larger and darker than normal cells
  • They have an irregular shape
  • They don’t produce all the proteins needed to function correctly
  • They have different antigen on their surface
  • They don’t respond to growth regulating processes
  • They divide by mitosis more frequently than normal cells
17
Q

What are two of the causes of tumour growth?

A

Abnormal methylation

Exposure to oestrogen

18
Q

What is methylation?

A

Adding a methyl group to something -CH3

19
Q

Why is methylation of DNA important?

A

It can control whether or not a gene is transcribed and translated

20
Q

What is hypermethylation?

A

When methylation happens too much

21
Q

What is hypomethylation?

A

When methylation happens too little

22
Q

What happens when tumour suppressor genes are hypermethylated?

A

Their genes are not transcribed so the proteins they produce to slow cell division aren’t made

23
Q

What happens when a proto-oncogene is hypomethylated?

A

Causes them to act as oncogenes

Increases the production of the protein which encourages cell division

24
Q

Why is exposure to oestrogen thought to increase the chances of breast cancer?

A
  • Stimulate certain breast cells to divide and replicate - more cell divisions increases the chance of mutations occurring
  • If cells that replicate do become cancerous, their rapid replication can be further assisted by oestrogen
  • Oestrogen is actually able to introduce mutations directly into the DNA of certain breast cells