Lecture 23 Flashcards
(30 cards)
cancer
- a heterogenous group of disorders characterized by the prescience of cells that do not respond to the normal controls on cell division.
- cancer cells divide rapidly and continuously, creating tumors
- most, if not all, arise from defects in DNA
tumors
masses of abnormal cells that crowed out normal cells and rob healthy tissues of nutrients.
benign
if cells of the tumor remain localized
malignant
if the cells invade other tissues
metastasis
- when cells of an advanced tumor can separate and travel to distant sites in the body where they can create secondary tumors.
- genes that contribute to metastasis often encode components of the extracellular matrix and the cytoskeleton.
- others encode adhesion proteins which help hold cells together.
Knudson’s theory
- proposed a model to explain the genetic basis of cancer based on his studies of retinoblastoma
- in cases where the disease affects just one eye, a single cell in one eye undergoes TWO successive mutations.
- Because the chance of these two mutations occurring in a single cell is remote, retinoblastoma is rare and typically develops only in one eye
- for the bilateral case, the child inherited one of the two mutations required for the cancer, and so every cell contains this initial mutation. All that is required is for one eye cell to undergo the second mutation. JUST ONE MORE MUTATION
Knudson’s actual model of cancer
- Rarely, a single cell undergoes two somatic mutations resulting in a single tumor, for example, in one eye.
- a predisposed person inherits one mutation
- some cells undergo a single somatic mutation that produces cancer
- because only a single mutation is required to produce cancer, the likelihood of its occurring twice increases.
- multiple mutations are required to product cancerous cells.
- if one or more of the required mutations is inherited, fewer additional mutations are required to product cancer.
clonal evolution
- the tumor cells acquire more mutations that allow them to become increasingly aggressive in their ability to propagate
- rate of clonal evolution depends on frequency of new mutation
- Defects in DNA repair and mutations that affect chromosomal segregation may contribute to the clonal evolution of tumors.
The signals that regulate cell division fall into two basic types
- molecules that stimulate cell division
- molecules that inhibit cell division
molecules that stimulate cell division
- a stimulatory gene can be made hyperactive or active at inappropriate times.
- mutations in stimulatory genes are usually dominant-acting; even the reduced amount of gene product by a single allele is sufficient to produce a stimulatory effect.
oncogenes
mutated dominant-acting stimulatory genes that cause cancer
molecules that inhibit cell division
- cell division may also be stimulated when inhibitory genes are made inactive
- mutated inhibitory genes generally have recessive effects; both copies must be mutated to remove all inhibition
tumor-suppressor genes
- inhibitory genes in cancer that are recessive
- both alleles must be mutated before the inhibition of cell division is removed
- the failure of their function promoters cell proliferation
- defects in both copies of a tumor-suppressor gene are required to cause cancer
proto-oncogenes
- they are responsible for normal cellular functions, but when mutated, they come oncogenes that contribute to the development of cancer.
- may become incorporated into a retroviral genome through recombination during infection
- within the retroviral genome, the proto-oncogene may become mutated to an oncogene that causes cancer when introduced back into a cell
how a proto-oncogene is converted to an oncogene
- the gene is altered in the virus and the product produces cell proliferation
- the proto-oncogene may end up next to a viral promotor or enhancer that leads to overexpression
- a virus may insert into the gene, disrupting normal function.
myc
transcription factor
src
protein tyrosine kinase
ras
GTP binding and GTPase
RB
transcription factor
p53
- transcription factor
- regulates apoptosis.
origins of oncogenes
- src was isolated from retrovirus Rous sarcoma virus in 1970
- cancer-causing viruses were assumed to carry cancer-causing genes that were transmitted to the host
retroviruses and oncogenes
- a retrovirus inserts its RNA into the cell, which undergoes reverse transcription and inserts into the host chromosome next to a proto-oncogene
- when the virus reproduces the proto-oncogene is incorporated into the virus
- in repeated rounds of viral infection and reproduction, the proto-oncogene becomes arranged or mutated or both producing an oncogene that is inserted back into the host chromosome.
Signal transduction pathway
- whether cells pass through the cell cycle and continue to divide depends on a large number of internal and external signals
- external signals are initiated by hormones and growth factors. These molecules are often unable to pass through the cell membranes because of their size or charge; they exert their effects by binding to receptors on the cell surface, which triggers a series of intracellular reactions that then carry the message to the nucleus or other site with the cell.
- defects in signal transduction pathways are often associated with cancer.
vascularization
- the growth of new blood vessels
- important to tumor progression
- supply oxygen and nutrients, which are essential to growth and survival of tumors