1 / 19

Genes and Cancer

Genes and Cancer. What is cancer?. Uncontrolled cell growth Ability to spread to other parts of the body Generally a disease of aging Tumors are named according to the tissue from which they form Benign (do not spread) Malignant (can metastasize). Is cancer genetic?.

shlomo
Download Presentation

Genes and Cancer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genes and Cancer

  2. What is cancer? • Uncontrolled cell growth • Ability to spread to other parts of the body • Generally a disease of aging • Tumors are named according to the tissue from which they form • Benign (do not spread) • Malignant (can metastasize)

  3. Is cancer genetic? • “Predisposition” can be inherited • Most mutagens are carcinogens • Cancer genes can be spread by viruses • Some cancers are know to be cause by chromosome abnormalities • Most cancers are sporadic (not inherited) • Cancers are caused by damage to DNA (mutation)

  4. Metastasis Trialx.com Nature.com

  5. First mutation Second mutation

  6. The cell cycle and regulation • Cell division usually closely regulated • Checkpoints control transition through stages • Tumor suppressor genes • Proto-oncogenes • Triggered by signal transduction • Loss of control leads to tumor formation

  7. Model of cell activation Bio.miami.com

  8. Mutations in regulatory genes implicated in cancer • RB1- tumor suppressor , controls progression from G1 to S • Ras proto-oncogenes: mutants are always switched on

  9. Nature.com Ras proteins mutated at Aa 12 or 61 Wormbook.org

  10. Genomic stability and hereditary cancer • BRCA 1 and BRCA 2 (breast, ovary prostate) • more information • p53: whether cell is repaired or undergoes apoptosis • Abl- proto-oncogene, white blood cells • Some genes are widely distribute; some restricted to specific tissues

  11. Multistep model for colon cancer APC K-ras DCC p53 p53 implicated in about half of all cancers

  12. Li- Fraumeni syndrome: a mutation in p53

  13. Inheritance of von Hippel-Lindau syndrome

  14. Chromosomal translocations- hereditary cancer Found in several leukemias And lymphomas Burkitt’s lymphoma www.nobelprize.org

  15. What causes cancer? • Minority of cancers are inherited • Environmental factors • Carcinogens • Viruses • Diet • Etc.

  16. How do we study causes of cancer? • Population studies • Case-control studies • Prospective studies

  17. Treatment strategiesExample: breast cancer strategy example Surgery, radiation, chemotherapy Target estrogen receptor if present Depends on presence of cancer-specific gene Microarrays make rapid diagnosis possible • Removal • Match phenotype to treatment • Use genotype to select drug

  18. Summary • Cancer is caused by genetic mutation, but is usually not inherited • Tumor cells divide uncontrollably • Tumors can arise in a variety of cells • Proto-oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes, and DNA repair genes are implicated in cancer • Cancers can arise from two or more mutations

  19. Population studies in conjunction with biochemical and genetic studies can help explain causes of cancer • Molecular and genomic studies are used to develop treatments that are specific to the type of tumor.

More Related