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Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes
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Page 1: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Cancer as a genetic disease

chapter 21pp 627-637 &lecture notes

Page 2: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Cancer is abnormal cell growth.

TUMORS

Skin Cancer

Page 3: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

TUMORS

Malignant Benign

Page 4: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Most cancers fall into one of these groups

Carcinomas

Sarcomas

Leukemias

Lymphomas

Page 5: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.
Page 6: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Scientists have also defined characteristics of a cancer cell.

Page 7: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Normal Fibroblasts Transformed Fibroblasts

Page 8: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Characteristics of Cancer

Loss of contact inhibition

Loss of apoptosis

Growth in soft agar

Tumor growth “in vivo”

Page 9: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

2 broad groups of cancer causing genes

1. Tumor suppressor genes

2. Oncogenes

Page 10: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

1. Tumor Suppressors

Mutations cause loss of function

Normally requires 2 “hits”

Haploinsufficiency

Page 11: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

1.

Loss of Heterozygosity

Page 12: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Examples of tumor suppressors

Retinoblastoma gene (rb)

p53 gene

Page 13: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Retinoblastoma: Retinal tumor

Page 14: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Alfred Knudson: 2 hit model of cancer

Page 15: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Breast cancer and p53

Page 16: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

osteoclasts neutrophils

P53 and the bax gene

Example

Page 17: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Nobel Prize in 2002 for their discovery of apoptosis

Brenner

Horvitz

Sulston

Page 18: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

2. Oncogenes

■ Second group of cancer causing genes

■ Mutations cause a gain of activity

■ Requires only one “hit”

Page 19: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

2.

Page 20: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Where do Oncogenes originate?

Page 21: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Hypothesis of origin of oncogenes

Viruses recombine with proto-oncogenes

Michael Bishop and Harold Varmus

Page 22: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Proto-oncogenes Oncogenevirus

mutated in virusControl by viral promoter mutated by virusIn host cell DNA

Possible outcomes of recombination

Page 23: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Here are some examples of how tumor suppressors and oncogenes stimulate cell

growth.

Page 24: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

1. Genes controlling the cell cycle

For example: cyclic dependent kinases

Page 25: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

2. Genes controlling DNA repair

Colon cancer

For example: HNPCC: colon cancer and DNA repair mutations

Page 26: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Breast cancer susceptibility genes (BRCA1 and BRCA2) & DNA repair

Breast Cancer Tumors

Page 27: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

3.Genes affecting chromosome segregation

apc gene and p53 gene required for proper chromosomal separation

metaphase

Page 28: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Van Hippel-Landau disease

▪ Extensive vascularization

▪ Dominant mutation

4. GENES that promote angiogenesis

Page 29: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

5. Telomerase activity may with cancer

Genes that regulate telomerase

Page 30: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

6. Genomic Instability

Hypomethylation (?)

Page 31: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Hypermethylation

Gene repression

Page 32: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Let’s summarize some key points

Page 33: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

These Cancer Causing Genes may affect

The cell cycle

DNA repair

Chromosome segregation Changes in chromosome number

Telomerase regulation

Vascularization

Genomic Instability DNA hypomethylation (?)

Page 34: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Cancer : Multi-step process

No

rmal

Loss of functionGain of function

Can

cerMany mutationsMultiple mutations

Page 35: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Cancer : Multi-step process

Initiation

Clonal expansion

Progression

Expansion

Page 36: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Now, Let’s look more closely at 2 cancers & their multi-step progression

Colon Cancer Retinoblastoma

Page 37: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.
Page 38: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.
Page 39: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Human Papilloma Virus & Cervical Cancer

GARDASIL Vaccine

Caused by HPV

Types 16 and 18: Cause 70% of cervical cancer

HPV Types 6 and 11: cause 90% of genital warts

Risk Factors: smoking, having many children, and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection.

Page 40: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

The relationship of p53 and Rb to the cell cycle

Page 41: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Cancer Prevention

Pap Smear for Cervical CA detection HPV & genital warts

Page 42: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Part II of lecture:Examples of miscommunication and cancer

Page 43: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

First a brief overview: The cell cycle

Page 44: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Mitosis

prophase metaphase

anaphase telophase

Page 45: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Interphase

Page 46: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Cyclins are the control proteins that keep the cell cycle moving.

But how??

Page 47: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Overview of how cyclin regulation

Page 48: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

(and late G1)

Cell cycle & cyclins

I get it!

Page 49: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Release of

Wt Rb protein are changed by cyclins.

Rb mutations prevent E2F binding

Page 50: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

(and late G1)

Requires E2F

Another look at the cell cycle

Page 51: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

But you said p53 is also involved in

the cell cycle. Where is it in the

picture?!

Page 52: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.

Under normal (wt) conditions P53 and Rb communicate

1 2 3

p21 inhibits phosphorylation step byPreventing cyclin/Cdk complex

4

Page 53: Cancer as a genetic disease chapter 21 pp 627-637 & lecture notes.