Title: Cancer cells
1Cancer cells
225.1 Control of gene expression
- Diploid cells are totipotent
- Contains all genes necessary to develop into an
entire organisms - Reproductive cloning
- Dolly the sheep- proved that animals can be
cloned - Accomplished by starving an enucleated cell prior
to implanting a new nucleus- forces cell into G0 - Therapeutic cloning
- Produces various cell types rather than a whole
organism - Provides cells and tissues to treat diseases
- Allows us to gain information about
differentiation
3Control of gene expression contd.
- Two methods of therapeutic cloning
- Use of embryonic stem cells
- Similar method as reproductive cloning
- Cell is directed to become a specific cell or
tissue type rather than a complete organism - Ethical considerations- each cell could have
potentially become an individual - Use of adult stem cells
- Many tissues have stem cells-skin, bone marrow,
umbilical cord cells - Adult stem cells may not give rise to all cell
types - Research is currently underway to develop
techniques to allow adult stem cells to give rise
to all other cell types
4Two types of cloning
5Control of gene expression contd.
- Gene expression in bacteria
- Studied in bacteria because it is simpler than
eukaryotes - E. coli lac operon- all 3 enzymes for lactose
metabolism are under the control of one promoter - Promoter- short DNA sequence where RNA polymerase
first attaches - Three structural genes each code for an enzyme
necessary for lactose metabolism - Promoter and structural genes together are called
an operon
6Control of gene expression contd.
- Gene expression in bacteria contd.
- Repression of the lac operon in E. coli
- When lactose is absent in the environment, then
enzymes for lactose metabolism are not necessary - Regulatory gene outside of operon codes for a
repressor protein - Repressor protein binds to the promoter and
prevents the structural genes from being
transcribed - Induction of the lac operon in E.coli
- When lactose is present it binds to repressor
protein - This frees the promoter site and RNA polymerase
can bond - Transcription of structural genes occurs
7The lac operon
8Control of gene expression contd.
- Gene expression in eukaryotes
- Housekeeping genes- control essential metabolic
enzymes or structural components that are needed
all the time - Very little regulation
- Levels of gene control
- Unpacking of DNA
- Chromatin packing is used to keep genes turned
off - Heterochromatin-inactive genes located within
darkly staining portions of chromatin ex. Barr
body - Euchromatin-loosely packed areas of active genes
- Euchromatin still needs processing before
transcription occurs - Chromatin remodeling complex pushes aside histone
9X-inactivation in mammalian females
10Control of gene expression contd.
- Levels of gene control in eukaryotes contd.
- Transcription
- Most important level of control
- Enhancers and promoters on DNA are involved
- Transcription factors and activators are proteins
which regulate these sites - mRNA processing
- Different patterns of exon splicing
- Translation
- Differences in the poly-A tails and/or guanine
caps may determine how long a mRNA is available
for translation - Specific hormones may also effect longevity of
mRNA
11Control of gene expression contd.
- Levels of gene control in eukaryotes contd.
- Protein activity
- Some proteins must be activated after synthesis
- Feedback controls regulate the activity of many
proteins
12Levels of gene expression control in eukaryotic
cells
13Control of gene expression contd.
- Transcription factors and activators
- Transcription factors- proteins which help RNA
polymerase bind to a promoter - Several transcription factors per gene form a
transcription initiation complex - Help in pulling DNA apart and in the release of
RNA polymerase for transcription - Transcription activators- proteins which speed up
transcription - Bind to an enhancer region on DNA
- Enhancer and promoter may be far apart-DNA must
form a loop to bring them close together
14Transcription factors and enhancers
15Control of gene expression contd.
- Signaling between cells
- Cells are in constant communication
- Cell produces a signaling molecule that binds to
a receptor on a target cell - Initiates a signal transduction pathway- series
of reactions that change the receiving cells
behavior - May result in stimulation of a transcription
activator - Transcription activator will then turn on a gene
16Cell-signaling pathway
1725.2 Cancer a failure of genetic control
- Characteristics of cancer cells
- Form tumors
- lose contact inhibition and pile on top of each
other and grow in multiple layers - Lack specialization
- nonspecialized and do not contribute to normal
function of tissue continue to go through the
cell cycle - Abnormal nuclei
- large nuclei with abnormal chromosome numbers
- Spread to new locations
- release a growth factor that promotes blood
vessel growth, and enzymes that break down the
basement membrane cancer cells are motile and
can travel in blood and lymph
18Development of cancer
19Normal cells versus cancer cells
20Cancer a failure of genetic control contd.
- Proto-oncogenes
- Encode for proteins that promote the cell cycle
and prevent apoptosis - Mutations in proto-oncogenes result in oncogenes
that promote cell division even more than
proto-oncogenes do - Results in over expression
- Oncogene activity causes cell to release large
amounts of cyclin - Results from mutation in cyclin-D proto-oncogene
- Causes cell signaling pathway to be constantly
active and prevents apoptosis - A proto-oncogene codes for a protein that makes
p53 unavailable - p53 transcription activator which stops cell
cycle and promotes apoptosis
21Mutations of proto-oncogenes
22Cancer a failure of genetic control contd.
- Tumor-suppressor genes
- Mutations in tumor suppressor genes result in
loss of function so products no longer inhibit
cyclin nor promote apoptosis - loss of function mutations
- Ex retinoblastoma protein controls transcription
factor for cyclin D - When tumor-suppressor gene p16 mutates, the
retinoblastoma protein is always active - Cell experiences repeated replications of DNA
without cell division
23Mutations of tumor-suppressor genes
24Cancer a failure of genetic control contd.
- Other genetic changes
- Telomere shortening- sequences of bases at the
ends of chromosomes that keep them from fusing
together - In normal cells, telomeres get shorter with each
division and eventually the cell dies from
apoptosis - In cancer cells, telomerase enzyme rebuilds
telomeres so divisions can continue - Angiogenesis- tumor cells release growth factors
that stimulate vessel and capillary growth to
deliver nutrients and oxygen - Metastasis- cancer cells break through basement
membranes and enter blood and lymph vessels to
spread throughout body
25Cancer a failure of genetic control contd.
- Causes of cancer
- Heredity
- Some types of cancer run in families
- Carcinogens
- Environmental agents that are mutagenic
- Radiation, some viruses, organic chemicals
26Cancer a failure of genetic control contd.
- Diagnosis of cancer
- Screening tests
- Pap smear, mammogram, colonoscopy
- Tumor marker tests
- Genetic tests
- Confirming diagnosis
- Biopsy, ultrasound, radioactive scans
- Treatment of cancer
- Chemotherapy
- Radiation therapy
- Bone marrow transplant
- Future- vaccines, anti-angiogenic drugs