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Cell Cycle Regulation and Cancer

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Alter cellular functions ... Behave differently depending upon cell type from which originate ... Normal genes that if mutated may act to make a cell cancerous ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cell Cycle Regulation and Cancer


1
Chapter 18
  • Cell Cycle Regulation and Cancer

2
Cancer
  • Second leading cause of disease in Western
    Countries
  • 1 million new cases per year in U.S.
  • 500,000 per year die
  • War declared on cancer approximately 30 years
    ago
  • Slowly treatments are changing/improving based
    upon better genetic understanding of the varieties

3
Cancer Rates in US
4
Cancer is a Genetic Disease
  • Genome alterations
  • One nucleotide to large-scale chromosome
    rearrangements, amplifications and deletions
  • Mostly in somatic cells (unless associated with
    inherited riskabout 1 of total)
  • Alter cellular functions
  • DNA repair, cell division , apoptosis, cellular
    differentiation and cell-cell contact/communicatio
    n

5
Normal and Cancer Karyotypes
  • Chromosome painting
  • (a) is a normal cell, (b) is a very messed up
    cancer cell

6
What is Cancer?
  • Large number of complex diseases
  • Behave differently depending upon cell type from
    which originate
  • Age on onset, invasiveness, response to treatment
  • Common general properties
  • Abnormal cell growth/division (cell
    proliferation)
  • If only this is a benign tumor
  • When grow in culture without contact inhibition
    are referred to as transformed
  • Spread to other regions of body (metastasis)
  • Malignant tumors

7
Clonal Origin of Tumors
  • Tumor arises from a single cell
  • Burkitts lymphoma
  • Translocation involving chromosome 8 (myc) and
    either chromosomes 2, 14, or 22 (near an
    immunoglobulin gene
  • All cells from a patient have breakpoints at
    exactly the same points as shown by DNA sequence
    analysis
  • Cancer cells in tumors of females all use same X
    chromosome (same one in Barr body)

8
Multistep Process
  • Cancer requires mutation of multiple genes
  • Age relationship with cancer consistent with this
  • If one mutation caused cancer then rate would be
    constant independent of age
  • It increases dramatically with age
  • Delay between carcinogen exposure and onset
  • 5-8 year delay between carcinogen exposure
    (Hiroshima and Nagasaki) and onset of leukemia
  • 15 year delay between tuberculosis X-ray
    treatment and onset of breast cancer

9
Age and Cancer
  • Note log scale for incidence rate

10
Multistep ProcessContinued
  • Cancers often develop in progressive steps
  • From mildly aberrant cells to malignant
  • See figure 18-3
  • Process called tumorigenesis

11
Tumorigenesis of Cervical Cancer
12
Properties of Cancer Cells
  • Genetic instability
  • Mutator phenotype
  • Duplicating, losing and translocating chromosomes
    or portions of them common
  • Chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML)
  • Chromosome 9/chromosome 22 translocation
  • BCR gene fused to ABL (protein kinase)
  • Mutant signal transduction protein stimulates
    cells constantly to proliferate

13
Genome Instability
  • Double minutes (DMs)
  • Miniature chromosomes giving many copies of rgion
  • Homogeneous staining regions (HSRs)
  • Tandem gene duplications

14
Chromosomal Translocation in CML
15
Xeroderma Pigmentosum
  • Failure to remove pyrimidine dimers from DNA
  • Excision repair defect
  • Patients often develop skin cancer and must stay
    out of sunlight

16
HFNPCC
  • Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer
  • Higher than normal rates of colon (first noted)
    but also elevated rates of ovary, uterine and
    kidney cancers
  • 1/200 persons, autosomal dominant
  • Eight genes associated and four involve mismatch
    repair systems

17
HNPCC Pedigree
  • Colon, Stomach endometiral, pancreatic, bladder
  • Orange also other cancers, multiple slashes
    unknown cause of death

18
Defects in Cell Cycle Regulation
  • Cell cycle
  • G1, S, G2, M phases
  • Progression through cycle is regulated and
    specific blocks or checkpoints exist
  • Nondividing cell (quiescent) is in an extended G1
    phase called G0
  • Cancer cells never enter G0

19
Cell Cycle
20
Cell Cycle Checkpoints
  • G1/S
  • Monitors cell size and for DNA damage
  • G2/M
  • Replication complete, DNA damage?
  • M
  • Spindle fibers connected, etc.?
  • G0
  • Does body require more of my type of cell?

21
Regulators of Cell Cycle
  • Cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs)
  • Cyclins synthesized and destroyed in a precise
    pattern
  • A cyclin bind to a specific CDKs, activating it
  • Other proteins phosphorylated/activated
  • CDK4/cyclinD activate transcription factors for
    genes such as DNA polymerase delta and DNA ligase
  • CDK1/cyclinB trigger events of early mitosis
    (chromosome condensation, nuclear membrane
    breakdown, etc.)

22
Cyclin Levels
23
Activation of CDKs
24
Apoptosis
  • Programmed cell death, cell suicide
  • Pathway should be activated if something goes
    wrong
  • Especially involving DNA/chromosome damage
  • Involves proteases called caspases
  • Regulated by Bcl2 and BAX
  • BAX homodimer promotes apoptosis, Bcl2 homodimer
    blocks apoptosis
  • Some cancer cells overproduce Bcl2 and are
    resistant to some chemotherapies and radiation
    treatment
  • Proteins involved in cell cycle checkpoints
    regulate pathway

25
Control of Apoptosis
26
Functions of Cancer Causing Genes/Alleles
  • Many disrupt control of cell cycle
  • Oncogenes
  • Proto-oncogenes
  • Normal genes that if mutated may act to make a
    cell cancerous
  • Recessive, cancer causing forms active and
    stimulates cell division
  • C-oncogenes and v-oncogenes
  • Tumor suppressors
  • Genes whose products act to regulate cell cycle
  • Loss of gene product function contributes to
    cancer process
  • Recessive, commonly involved with inherited risk
  • About 200 proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressor
    genes

27
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28
Oncogenes/Proto-oncogenes
  • Cyclin D1 and Cyclin E are proto-oncogenes
  • Often amplified or over expressed due to other
    mutations (e.g. translocation) in many cancers
  • cyclinD1 allows for DNA replication (S phase)
  • Over expression seems to contribute to cells
    progression from G0 phase and begin division

29
ras Proto-oncogenes
  • Involved in signal transduction pathway
  • As are many proto-oncogene products
  • ras family genes mutated in 40 of all cancers
  • Involved in signal transduction pathway from
    growth factor receptor to nucleus
  • G protein
  • Mutant form lacks GTPase activity and remains
    active
  • See figure 18-11

30
Ras Pathway
  • Growth factor binds receptor
  • Receptor exchanges GTP for GDP on Ras
  • Ras activated
  • Ras?Raf?Mek?Map Kinase?transcription factors?
    genes turned on

31
Mutant Ras Protein
  • Single amino acid changes create N-ras and K-ras
    variants

32
p53 Tumor Suppressor Gene
  • Mutated (inactivated) in more than 50 of all
    cancers
  • p53 regulates (activates or represses)
    transcription of more than 50 different genes
  • p53 regulated by Mdm2 (prevents the
    phosphorylations and acetylations that activate
    inactive p53)
  • Activated p53 levels rise rapidly if DNA is
    damaged or repair intermediates accumulate

33
P53 Function
  • Activated p53 acts as transcription factor to
    turn on genes that
  • arrest the cell cycle so DNA can be repaired
  • Initiates synthesis of p21, which inhibits
    CDK4/cyuclinD1 complex, blocking entry into S
    phase
  • Genes expressed which retard rate of DNA
    replication
  • Other products block G2/M progression
  • Initiate apoptosis if DNA cannot be readily
    repaired
  • Turns on Bax gene, represses Bcl2 gene
  • Bax homodimers activate process of cell
    destruction
  • Cancer cells lacking p53 do not initiate pathway
    even if DNA/cellular damage is great

34
RB1 Tumor Suppressor Gene
  • Retinoblastoma 1 gene
  • Involved in breast, bone, lung, bladder and
    retinal cancers (among others)
  • Inheriting one mutated (inactivated) copy of gene
    increases chances of retinoblastoma formation
    from 1/14,000-20,000 to 85 (plus increases other
    cancer rates)
  • Loss of second copy in a cell eliminates function
  • Normal cells unlikely to lose both good copies

35
pRB Function
  • Tumor suppressor protein that controls the G1/S
    checkpoint
  • Found in nucleus and activity regulated by level
    of phosphorylation (by CDK4/cyclinD1 complex)
  • Nonphosphorylated version binds to TFs such as
    E2F, inactivating them
  • Free E2F and the other regulators turn on gt30
    genes required for transition to S phase

36
Familial Retinoblastoma
37
Inherited Predisposition for Cancer
  • About 1-2 of cancer has an inherited or familial
    component
  • 50 different forms known at present
  • Inherited in Mendelian fashion but most all
    genes/alleles are recessive
  • Second copy must be mutated in a somatic cell
  • Called loss of heterozygosity (and loss of
    function)
  • Loss of second copy in germ line lethal
  • RB1 and APC (lost in FAP, familial adenomatous
    polyposis) are examples of such genes

38
Multistep Development of Colon Cancer
  • APC loss causes cells to partially escape cell
    cycle regulation, DCC seems to be involved in
    cell adhesion and differentiation

39
Transforming Viruses
  • Viruses discovered to cause cancer in animals
  • Acute transforming viruses
  • Commonly but not always retroviruses
  • Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) discovered by Francis
    Peyton Rous discovered in 1910 as a causative
    agent of chicken sarcomas (solid tumors of
    muscle, bone or fat)
  • Many years later shown to be retrovirus
  • Nobel Prize in 1966 (link of viruses to cancer)

40
Retroviruses
  • ssRNA chromosome
  • Chromosome copied to DNA by reverse transcriptase
    upon entry into cell
  • DNA integrated into host cell chromosome
  • Provirus
  • Provirus has strong promoter elements in U5 and
    U3 terminal sequences
  • U5 expresses gag, pol and env
  • Oncogenic when
  • Integrate near proto-oncogene and cause
    inappropriate or over expression
  • Bring v-onc as part of viral chromosome

41
Retroviruses
  • Many transforming retroviruses are defective in
    the sense that one or more of gal/pol/env have
    been deleted to make room for the v-onc

42
Viral Oncogenes
  • Most v-onc genes have normal cellular
    counterparts
  • If simply mutated to the oncogenic form and not
    in a virus are called c-onc

43
Human Cancer-Associated Viruses
  • To date no acute transforming retroviruses have
    been discovered in humans
  • Viruses can contribute to but not be the sole
    cause of human cancer
  • However, up to 15 of all cancers have a viral
    association
  • Papillomaviruses HPV 16 and 18, hepatitis B
    virus, Epstein-Barr virus, Human T-cell leukemia
    virus are examples of cancer-associated viruses

44
Human Viruses Associated With Cancer
  • Non-retroviral varieties
  • Many of these v-onc genes act to stimulate the
    cell cycle (viruses needs host replication
    apparatus to multiply

45
V-onc Gene Product Action
  • Some v-onc gene products have their transforming
    effect by binding and thereby taking out
    certain tumor suppressor gene products
  • Cell division required to provide replication
    apparatus for virus
  • Bad, but does open some interesting treatment
    possibilities

46
Environmental Agents and Cancer
  • Natural and man-made carcinogens
  • Chemicals, radiation, chronic infections
  • 30 of cancer deaths associated with cigarettes
  • Seems to preferentially mutate proto-oncogene and
    tumor suppressor genes
  • Red meat consumption
  • How cooked?
  • Alcohol-based inflammation of the liver
  • Aflatoxin (mold on peanuts)
  • UV light or ionizing radiation
  • Radon gas (up to 50 of radiation exposure???)
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