Title: Cancer and Genetics
1Cancer and Genetics
- Concept 19.3 Cancer results from genetic changes
that affect cell cycle control - The gene regulation systems that go wrong during
cancer - Turn out to be the very same systems that play
important roles in embryonic development
2Types of Genes Associated with Cancer
- The genes that normally regulate cell growth and
division during the cell cycle - Include genes for growth factors, their
receptors, and the intracellular molecules of
signaling pathways
3Oncogenes and Proto-Oncogenes
- Oncogenes
- Are cancer-causing genes
- Proto-oncogenes
- Are normal cellular genes that code for proteins
that stimulate normal cell growth and division
4- A DNA change that makes a proto-oncogene
excessively active - Converts it to an oncogene, which may promote
excessive cell division and cancer
Figure 19.11
5Tumor-Suppressor Genes
- Tumor-suppressor genes
- Encode proteins that inhibit abnormal cell
division
6Interference with Normal Cell-Signaling Pathways
- Many proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes
- Encode components of growth-stimulating and
growth-inhibiting pathways, respectively
7- The p53 gene encodes a tumor-suppressor protein
- That is a specific transcription factor that
promotes the synthesis of cell cycleinhibiting
proteins
Figure 19.12b
8- Mutations that knock out the p53 gene
- Can lead to excessive cell growth and cancer
(c)
Effects of mutations. Increased cell division,
possibly leading to cancer, can result if the
cell cycle is overstimulated, as in (a), or not
inhibited when it normally would be, as in (b).
EFFECTS OF MUTATIONS
Protein overexpressed
Protein absent
Cell cycle not inhibited
Cell cycle overstimulated
Increased cell division
Figure 19.12c
9The Multistep Model of Cancer Development
- Normal cells are converted to cancer cells
- By the accumulation of multiple mutations
affecting proto-oncogenes and tumor-suppressor
genes
10- Certain viruses
- Promote cancer by integration of viral DNA into a
cells genome
11Inherited Predisposition to Cancer
- Individuals who inherit a mutant oncogene or
tumor-suppressor allele - Have an increased risk of developing certain
types of cancer