Tissue renewal, stem cells and cancer Flashcards

1
Q

What are the gene defects present in cancer cells?

A

Proliferation genes (proto-oncogenes) and anti-proliferation genes. There is usually activating mutations in the proliferation genes and inactivation mutations in the anti-proliferation genes.

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2
Q

What do oncogenes do?

A

They promote inappropriate cell proliferation.

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3
Q

What factors contribute to inappropriate cell proliferation?

A

Normal protein in a cell not normally expressing a protein, normal protein being made in excess and mutant protein that is always in the active state.

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4
Q

What can inactivation of RB/CIP result in?

A

Inappropriate progress into S phase and both factors are therefore tumour suppressors.

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5
Q

What does the dermis provide?

A

Mechanical support.

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6
Q

Where is the dermis located?

A

Below the epidermis.

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7
Q

Where is the hypodermis located?

A

Below the dermis.

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8
Q

What types of tissue makes up the dermis?

A

Loose conenctive tissue and dense connective tissue. The dense connective tissue lies below the loose connective tissue.

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9
Q

What cells is the epidermis made up of?

A

Keratinocytes and melanocytes, as well as Langerhans cells that are involved in immune responses.

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10
Q

What are the three key factors that maintain tissue organisation?

A

Cell communication, selective cell to cell adhesion and cell memory.

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11
Q

How does the rate of cell and renewal tissue vary across different tissues?

A

Neurons never renew, bones take many years, epidermal takes months, erythrocytes take months and gut epithelial only take a few days.

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12
Q

What is essential for tissue renewal?

A

Stem cells.

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13
Q

What are multipotent stem cells?

A

Can give rise to specialised cell types within a specific tissue or organ.

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14
Q

What are unipotent stem cells?

A

Can only develop into one cell type - lowest undifferentiation of all the cell types.

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15
Q

What are oligopotent stem cells?

A

The ability of progenitor cells to give rise to a few cell types.

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16
Q

What is gut epithelium made up of?

A

A single layer folded in the small intestine into crypts and villi.

17
Q

What controls stem cell renewal and the production of differentiated cell types?

A

Cell signalling.

18
Q

What are hematopoietic stem cells?

A

Stem cells in the bone marrow that give rise to all types of blood cells. They are multipotent stem cells.

19
Q

How can stem cells be used to treat blood disorders?

A

Some leukemias - the patients faulty bone marrow cells can be destroyed and replaced by donor bone marrow.

20
Q

What are induced pluripotent stem cells?

A

They are adult cells that have been reprogrammed using transcription factors to pluripotent cells.

21
Q

What are the benefits of induced pluripotent stem cells?

A

They can avoid problems of immune rejection, they avoid ethical problems associated with deriving ES cells from human embryos.

22
Q

What did John Gurdon do?

A

He showed that a nucleus from an adult frog could replace the nucleus of a frog egg and result in the development of a tadpole - a clone.

23
Q

What is a benign tumour?

A

Excess growth of cells within their original tissue.

24
Q

What is a malignant tumour?

A

Cells that invade surrounding tissues.

25
Q

How are benign and malignant tumours formed?

A

A series of mutations in genes that normally regulate cell proliferation, survival and organisation within tissues.

26
Q

What are metastases?

A

Cells that can break through boundaries and enter the bloodstream and colonise distant sites in the body.