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Characteristics of Cancer

Characteristics of Cancer. Initiation (irreversible). Promotion (reversible). More mutations Progression (irreversible). malignant metastases. Different Steps of Carcinogenesis.

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Characteristics of Cancer

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  1. Characteristics of Cancer

  2. Initiation (irreversible) Promotion (reversible) More mutations Progression (irreversible) malignant metastases

  3. Different Steps of Carcinogenesis Initiation: Mutation in one or more cellular genes controlling key regulatory pathways of the cell (irreversible)—must be a heritable DNA alteration. Promotion: selective growth enhancement induced in the initiated cell and its progeny by the continuous exposure to a promoting agent. Progression: results from continuing evolution of unstable chromosomes; further mutations from genetic instability during promotion—results in further degrees of independence, invasiveness, metastasis, etc.

  4. Initiation • Initiation is the induction of a mutation in a critical gene involved in the control of cell proliferation. • As with mutational events, initiation requires one or more rounds of cell division for the “fixation” of the process. • The metabolism of initiating agents to non-reactive forms and the high efficiency of DNA repair of the tissue can alter the process of initiation. • Initiation is irreversible although the initiated cell may eventually die during the development of the neoplasm.

  5. Promotion • Epigenetic event—change in gene expression without change in DNA. • Mitogenic (Not mutagenic) Stimulates proliferation. Causes both mutated and normal cells to proliferate. • Enhances the effect of the genotoxic initiating agent by establishing clones of initiated cells. • Long delay possible between administration of initiating agent and promoting agent. • Promotion is reversible.

  6. Immortality

  7. Go signals

  8. Stop signals

  9. Programmed Cell Death

  10. Angiogenesis

  11. Metastasis I) One of the most important proteins is the cell-cell adhesion molecules (CAMs), whose main role is to tether cells to surrounding tissue. Among the CAMs, the most common protein implicated in metastasis is E-cadherin, found in all epithelial cells. In normal cells, E-cadherin acts as a bridge between adjacent cells, enabling cytoplasmic contact and sharing intracellular signaling factors responsible for inhibiting invasion and metastatic capability. Most epithelial cancers show a loss of E-cadherin function and this elimination plays a significant role in metastatic capability. II) Another class of proteins involved in tissue invasion are the integrins, a widely distributed family of heterodimeric transmembrane adhesion receptors, which link cells to the extracellular matrix. In addition to their role in angiogenesis, they also play a central role in cell adhesion and migration, control of cell differentiation, proliferation and survival. Changes in integrin expression are also evident in invasive and metastatic cells. Successful colonization of new sites (both local and distant) demands adaptation, which is achieved by changing integrin subunits displayed by the migrating cells. For example, carcinoma cells facilitate invasion by preferentially expressing integrin subunits needed for binding to degraded stromal components by extracellular proteases. III) Another strategy in successful colonization is increasing expression of extracellular proteases (such as MMPs –– Matrix MetalloProteinases) while decreasing levels of protease inhibitors. Cells in the stroma close to cancer cells secrete active proteases, which facilitate invasion by degrading components of the extracellular matrix. This enables cancer cells to migrate across blood vessel boundaries and through normal epithelial cell layers.

  12. These events often occur in a defined progression

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