Genetics - Bone Pain Flashcards

1
Q

Carcinogenesis

A

The description of how a normal cell evolves into an invasive cancer cell

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2
Q

Changes to make the cell tumourgenic

A

Immortilisation
Indepence of expression growth factors - fails to follow normal growth constraints
Invasion of the underlying basement

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3
Q

Hallmarks of cancer

A
Evading growth suppressors 
Avoiding immune destruction 
Enabling replicative immortality 
Tumour-producing infl 
Activating invasion and metastasis 
Inducing angiogenesis 
Genome instability and mutation 
Resisting cell death 
Deregulating cellular energetics 
Sustaining proliferative signalling
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4
Q

Important heritage (cell to cell) changes

A

Dominant driver mutations in oncogenes

Recessive driver mutations in tumour suppressor genes

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5
Q

Epigenetic changes

A

The gene is not altered in DNA sequence

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6
Q

Changes leading to functional changes in the operation of the cell

A

A protein might be over expressed or under expressed
A protein might change its function
It might produce a change in the regulation of a pathway

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7
Q

Types of mutations

A
Substitution 
Deletion 
Insertion 
Copy number change 
Break points/ chromosomal rearrangement
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8
Q

Oncogene products

A

Involved in pathways that regulate growth

Usually has a lack of regulation (cell growth factor independent) or increased activity

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9
Q

Converting proto-oncogene –> oncogene

A

Point mutation or deletion
Gene amplification events
Chromosomal rearrangement – involving breakage and re-joining of the DNA helix

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10
Q

Loss of TSG

A

Loss of the gene and its protein products will be a big problem for maintaining normal cell growth controls

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11
Q

Genetics in the diagnosis and management of cancer

A

Diagnosis
Subtype classification
Prognostic info
Monitoring treatment response (detection of minimal residual disease)
Rational drug design (e.g. tyrosine kinase inhibitors)
Stratification of treatment regimes based on genetics (actionable somatic driver mutations)

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12
Q

Carcinogens (initiators and promoters)

A
Tobacco smoke 
Ionising radiation 
Sunlight 
Aflatoxin 
Alcohol, asbestos, benzene, bracken, charred foods, creosote, diesel fumes, dioxins, radon, formaldehyde, saccharin, tar, HPV, human T-cell lymphotropic virus, etc
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13
Q

What happens when there is a germline mutation or deletion of one allele of a TSG

A

Inactivation or

Deletion of the other allele

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14
Q

What TSG is frequently inactivated in malignancies

A

TP53 - ‘guardian of the genome’

Can cause cell cycle arrest

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15
Q

Li Fraumeni Syndrome

A

Rare, autosomal disorder
Predominance of sarcomas, breast cancers, brain tumours and adrenocortical carcinomas
Caused by inherited mutations of TP53

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16
Q

Examples of germline mutations

A

These genes are identified and pts may be offered add screening or prophylactic surgery
Pts w/ BRCA1 and BRCA2 gene variants may opt to have a preventative mastectomy or oophorectomy