Cell Biology Lecture 38: Cancer Genetics + Oncogenes

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104 Terms

1
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) Do benign tumors penetrate adjacent tissue borders?

No

2
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) Do benign tumors grow slowly or quickly?

Slowly

3
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) Do benign tumors metastasize (spread)?

No

4
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) Are benign tumors well differentiated?

Yes

5
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) What do benign tumors closely resemble?

Tissue of origin in morphology and function

6
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) Do malignant tumors penetrate adjacent tissue borders?

Yes

7
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) Do malignant tumors grow slowly or quickly?

Quickly

8
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) What are common in malignant tumors?

Necrosis and hemorrhage

9
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) Do malignant tumors metastasize (spread)?

Yes

10
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) Do more aggressive malignancies have cells with more or less fidelity to their precursors?

Less

11
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) What are malignant neoplasms with undifferentiated cells called?

Anaplastic

12
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(Benign vs Malignant Tumors) Is hepatoma benign or malignant?

Malignant

13
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(Benign Tumors) What is a benign tumor of the epithelium that exhibits a branched, exophytic growth pattern?

Papilloma

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(Benign Tumors) What is a growth that projects above a mucosal surface; usually restricted to benign neoplasms?

Polyp-

15
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(Benign Tumors) What is a proliferation that demonstrates glandular differentiation?

Adenoma

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(Benign Tumors) What is a tumor that arises from germ cells and contains derivatives of all of the germ layers? (Usually found in gonads)

Teratoma

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(Benign Tumors) What is a localized overproliferation of disorganized but mature (differentiated) cells indigenous to that particular area?

Hamartoma

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(Benign Tumors) What is a well organized (normal) tissue in an abnormal location?

Choristoma

19
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(Malignant Tumors) What occurs with malignant tumors?

1. Increased cellularity

2. Increased cell size

3. Increased nuclear to cytoplasmic ratio

4. Pleomorphisms

5. Abnormal mitosis

6. Loss of cohesion

7. Necrosis

20
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a malignant tumor of epithelial origin?

Carcinoma

21
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a carcinoma of gastric mucosa?

Gastric Adenocarcinoma

22
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a carcinoma of skin or mucosa?

Squamous Cell Carcinoma

23
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a carcinoma of the bladder epithelium?

Transitional Cell Carcinoma

24
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a malignant tumor of mesenchymal origin?

Sarcoma

25
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a sarcoma of cartilaginous origin?

Chondrosarcoma

26
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a sarcoma that demonstrates osseous differentiation?

Osteosarcoma

27
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a sarcoma of fibrous connective tissue?

Fibrosarcoma

28
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a malignant tumor of melanocytes?

Melanoma

29
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a malignant tumor of the testes?

Seminoma

30
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(Malignant Tumors) What is a malignant tumor of the lymphocytes?

Lymphoma

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(Malignant Tumors) What is a malignant tumor of hematopoietic cells?

Leukemia

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(Malignant Tumors) What is a malignant tumor of plasma cells?

Myeloma

33
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(Malignant Tumors) What do carcinomas use to metastasize?

Lymphatics

34
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(Malignant Tumors) What do sarcomas use to metastasize?

Blood

35
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(Genetics of Cancer) What are the genes that must be balanced for cell growth/proliferation?

1. Oncogenes

2. Tumor Suppressors

36
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(Genetics of Cancer) What is Knudson's two hit hypothesis?

Tumor suppressor genes need both alleles to be activated in order for phenotypic change

37
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(Genetics of Cancer) Which tumor suppressor gene is related to Knudson's two hit hypothesis?

Rb

38
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(Tumor Suppression) What is the most frequently observed somatic gene event in human cancer?

Alteration of p53 gene (tumor suppressor)

39
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(Tumor Suppression) What syndrome are p53 alterations found in?

Li-Fraumeni Syndrome

40
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(Tumor Suppression) What is Li-Fraumeni Syndrome characterized by?

1. Early onset breast cancer

2. Sarcomas

41
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(Tumor Suppression) What syndrome is the result of a mutation in PTEN?

Cowden Syndrome

42
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(Tumor Suppression) What syndrome is the result of a mutation in p57?

Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndrome

43
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(Tumor Suppression) What syndrome is the result of Rb loss?

Retinoblastoma

44
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(Alcohol + Tobacco Cancers) What is the receptor that is overactivated by alcohol and tobacco cancers and activates other pathways for malignant growth?

Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR)

45
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(Alcohol + Tobacco Cancers) What are the pathways that are activated by EGFR and contribute to malignant growth?

1. Ras (MAPK)

2. PI3K/AKT

46
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(Alcohol + Tobacco Cancers) What does the dysregulation of NF-kB promote?

1. Tumor angiogenesis

2. Metastasis

3. Treatment resistance

47
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(Alcohol + Tobacco Cancers) What is the most common mutated gene in alcohol and tobacco cancers?

p53

48
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(Alcohol + Tobacco Cancers) Which is the tumor suppressant gene that is inactivated in alcohol and tobacco cancers?

p16

49
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(Alcohol + Tobacco Cancers) Which cancer is the most commonly associated with alcohol and tobacco cancer?

Squamous cell carcinoma of head and neck

50
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(Alcohol + Tobacco Cancers) How much more risk of oral cancer is there for smokers and drinkers?

15 times greater

51
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(Cell Cycle) In what phase does replication of DNA occur?

S-phase

52
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(Cell Cycle) In what phase does mitosis occur?

M-phase

53
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(Cell Cycle) Which phases are in interphase?

G1, S, G2

54
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(Cell Cycle) What are the three types of cells in G0-phase?

1. Permanent

2. Labile

3. Stable

55
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(Cell Cycle) Which cells can re-enter the cell cycle from G0-phase?

Stable cells

56
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(Cell Cycle) What are the three regulators of the cell cycle?

1. Cyclins

2. Cyclin-dependent Kinases (CDKs)

3. Cyclin-dependent Kinase Inhibitors (CKIs)

57
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(Cell Cycle) Which cyclin promotes DNA replication in S and progresses into G2?

Cyclin A

58
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(Cell Cycle) Which cyclin peaks near the end of G2 and is degraded during M?

Cyclin B

59
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(Cell Cycle) If cyclins A and B are not degraded through ubiquitin-dependent proteolysis, what happens?

Cell is arrested in M-phase

60
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(Cell Cycle) Which cyclins reach maximum levels in mid-to-late G1 and are required to pass the restriction point (R)?

Cyclin D1, D2, D3, E

61
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(Cell Cycle) What needs to pair with each other in vivo to phosphorylate Rb?

Cyclin D1 and CDK4/6

62
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(Cell Cycle) Why must Rb be phosphorylated?

To drive cell cycle

63
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(Cell Cycle) Is Rb a tumor suppressor gene?

Yes

64
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(Cell Cycle) Which cyclin accumulates (spikes) in G1 and reaches its maximum level as the cell enters S?

Cyclin E

65
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(Cell Cycle) What does cyclin E binds to for progression into S?

CDK2

66
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(Cell Cycle) What happens during G1 phase?

Synthesis of cyclin D is increased

67
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(Cell Cycle) What is promoted when cyclin D partners with CDK4/6 in G1?

1. Cell cycle entry

2. Progression through G1 to S

68
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(Cell Cycle) What is controlled by the CDK2 and cyclin A interaction in S?

Phosphorylation of targets involved in DNA replication

69
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(Cell Cycle) What is the primary regulator of the cell cycle in G2?

CDK1

70
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(Cell Cycle) What do CKIs ensure?

That DNA damage during cell cycle was repaired

71
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(Cell Cycle) How do CKIs ensure repairment?

1. Arrest growth and initiate repair

2. Apoptosis

72
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(Cell Cycle) What CKI is the downstream of p53?

p21

73
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(Cell Cycle) Which CKI blocks cyclin bound CDK4/6 to inhibit growth?

p16

74
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(Cell Cycle) Which loss of CKI leads to development of endocrine tumors?

p27

75
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(Cell Cycle) What does Rb bind to in order to drive the cell cyle?

E2F

76
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(Cell Cycle) What signaling pathway leads to hypophosphorylation of Rb and cell cycle arrest?

p53-p21-Rb signaling

77
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(Cell Cycle) Is hypophosphorylated Rb an active tumor suppressor?

Yes

78
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(Cell Cycle) What happens to hyperphosphorylated Rb?

Loses tumor suppression ability

79
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(Cell Cycle) Which CKI inhibits G1 phase cyclin-CDK complexes?

p21

80
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(HPV Cancer) What are the high risk HPV types?

16, 18, 31, 32

81
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(HPV Cancer) What is high risk HPV types associated with?

Oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinomas

82
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(HPV Cancer) Are HPV cancers less or more differentiated than tobacco cancers?

Less

83
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(HPV Cancer) Do HPV cancers have worse or better prognosis than tobacco cancers?

Better Prognosis

84
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(HPV Cancer) Do HPV cancers exhibit loss of p53 or p16?

No

85
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(HPV Cancer) What is elevated in HPV cancers?

p16

86
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(HPV Cancer) Is p53 mutated in HPV cancers?

No, but it is inhibited

87
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(HPV Cancer) Which protein aids in the process of viral DNA replication?

E2

88
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(HPV Cancer) Which protein promotes the degradation of p53?

E6

89
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(HPV Cancer) Which protein binds and inactivates Rb?

E7

90
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(HPV Cancer) Which protein regulates E6 and E7?

E2

91
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(HPV Cancer) What happens if E7 inhibits pRb?

S-phase progression

92
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(HPV Cancer) Which HPV is low risk and cause papillomas?

Squamous papilloma

93
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(HPV Cancer) Which HPV is high risk and cause cervical cancer?

Cervical dysplasia

94
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(UV Radiation Cancer) What is the result of clonal expansion of UVB-transformed keratinocytes?

Actinic Cheilitis

95
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(UV Radiation Cancer) What is actinic cheilitis characterized by?

Genomic instabiliy

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(UV Radiation Cancer) What does UVB induce?

Formation of aberrant covalent bonds between adjacent pyrimidine bases

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(UV Radiation Cancer) What can UVB cause mutations in during the initiation stage of actinic-induced carcinogenesis?

p53

98
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(UV Radiation Cancer) How is actinic cheilitis expressed on the lips?

Loss of vermillion border

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(UV Radiation Cancer) Does actinic cheilitis cause dysplasia?

Yes

100
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(Squamous Cell Carcinoma) What are the three classifications for squamous cell carcinoma?

1. Skin

2. Oral Cavity

3. Pharynx