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Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology
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Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle

Dr. Leonard Da Silva

Senior Lecturer

Molecular & Cellular Pathology

Page 2: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Molecular Pathology

• study and diagnosis of disease molecules organs, tissues or fluids

• anatomic pathology, clinical pathology, molecular biology, biochemistry, proteomics and genetics

Page 3: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Tissue sources

Page 4: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Time Line

• 1902 Boveri – abnormal chromosomal segregation

• 1960’s Philadelphia Chromosome

• 1970’s – oncogenes – 2 hit hypothesis

• 1980’s cloning of RB

• 1990’s BRCA1/2

• 2000 Human genome

Page 5: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.
Page 6: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Grade, Stage & Prognosis

Page 7: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.
Page 8: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Cancer As A Disease Of Genetic Material

Heritable predisposition - Retinoblastoma

Chromosomal Abnormalities - Burkitt’s

Rare genetic disorders have inability to repair DNA e.g.

Xeroderma pigmentosa

Many chemical carcinogens are also mutagens

Transfer of DNA from tumour cells to normal cells leads

to transformation

Page 9: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Cancer Producing Genes Any mutated gene that contributes to neoplastic transformation

• Oncogenes

• Tumour suppressor genes

• Stability/DNA repair genes

Page 10: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Dominant Oncogenes

Identified as transforming genes in viruses

Altered forms of normal cellular genes - Proto-oncogenes

Products of oncogenes involved in:- Cell cycle- Cell division- Differentiation

This maintenance is lost in cancer cells

Page 11: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Control of normal cellular Growth & Differentiationmediated by:

Intracellular pathways activated

Activation / Repression of various genes

Growth Factors Growth Factor Receptors Cytokines

Dominant Oncogenes

Page 12: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Examples of Dominant Oncogenes

abl CML translocation

bcl2 Follicular Lymphoma translocation

erbB-2 Breast/ovarian carcinoma amplification

c-myc Burkitt’s lymphoma translocation

ras Thyroid /Colon carcinoma point mutation

ret Thyroid carcinoma Rearrangement

Page 13: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Tumour Suppressor Genes

Loss of function

Familial Syndromes

- Retinoblastoma

- Familial Adenomatous Polyposis

Page 14: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

a b c d

a d

a c

b c

b d

Retinoblastoma

Page 15: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Examples of Tumour Suppressor Genes

APC Colon Cancer

BRCA1 Breast & Ovarian Cancer

BRCA2 Breast Cancer

NF1 Neurofibromatosis (malignant neurofibromas)

TP53 Brain, Breast, Colon, Liver, Lung carcinomas

RB Retinoblastoma, Sarcomas, Bladder

WT1 Wilm’s tumour

Page 16: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Dominant Oncogenes

Tumour Suppressor Genes

Enhanced Reduced

ActivatingGain in function

Dominant

InactivatingLoss of function

Recessive

Page 17: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

DNA REPAIR

• Homologous recombination (HRR)

• Non-homologous end joining (NEHJ)

• Nucleotide excision (NER)

• Base excision (BER)

• Mismatch Repair (MMR)

Page 18: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Mechanism of Mutations

Point Mutations

Amplification

Translocation /

Rearrangements

Deletions

Altered Expression

Page 19: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Point Mutation

Change in single base-paire.g. G:C to A:T

SHE HAD ONE MAD CAT AND ONE SAD RAT

SHE HAD ONE BAD CAT AND ONE SAD RAT

Page 20: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

8 14 8 14

C-myc

IgH

Translocation

Page 21: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Amplification

N-Myc Gene in NeuroblastomaCerbB2 gene in Breast Cancer

Page 22: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

HER2 amplified HER2 non-amplified

Acquired from Vysis Educational Slide Set

Page 23: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Deletions

Tumour suppressor genes

e.g. retinoblastoma

Page 24: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Which cell does cancer arise in?

Page 25: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

MULTISTEP MODEL OF CARCINOGENESIS

Page 26: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.
Page 27: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Principles of mammographic screening

Page 28: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Cell cycle

• The cell cycle is an ordered set of events

Page 29: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

The cell cycle

Page 30: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.
Page 31: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Key regulators

• Cdk (cyclin dependent kinase, adds phosphate to a protein), along with cyclins, are major control switches

Page 32: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Master regulators

Page 33: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.
Page 34: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.
Page 35: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

Checkpoints

Page 36: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

P53 and cell cycle

• p53 is a protein that functions to block the cell cycle if the DNA is damaged. If the damage is severe this protein can cause apoptosis (cell death).

• p53 levels are increased in damaged cells. This allows time to repair DNA by blocking the cell cycle.

• A p53 mutation is the most frequent mutation leading to cancer Li Fraumeni syndrome, where a genetic a defect in p53 leads to a high frequency of cancer in affected individuals.

Page 37: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

HPV pathogenesis

Page 38: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

HPV pathogenesis

Page 39: Molecular Pathology – Cell cycle Dr. Leonard Da Silva Senior Lecturer Molecular & Cellular Pathology.

cell cycle <=> patient care