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Published byEthan Carroll Modified over 8 years ago
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Chapter 8 (Part 1): Mitosis Cell Cycle Regulation & Cancer 8.7 - 8.9 (Part 1) Pgs. 133-135 Objective: I can describe and explain how cancer involves a disruption in the regulation of the cell cycle and mitosis. But first, how is cell cycle regulated normally ?
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Regulation of the Cell Cycle Checkpoints exist in different phases If cell passes, then allowed to proceed to next phase Checkpoints NOT at end of phase
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Cell Cycle Control System G 1 checkpoint – near end of G 1 Checks if cell grew enough? DNA damaged? If bad, will put into G 0 (rest period) OR will activate apoptosis (cell suicide) G 2 checkpoint – near end of G 2 Checks if DNA replicated OK, enough organelles? M checkpoint – at metaphase of mitosis Checks if chromosomes lined up correctly, so that each cell gets all the DNA they need (homologous pairs, singled, etc.) Regulation enzymes: Cdk & cyclins (and others) Enzymes encoded for by genes
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G1 Checkpoint (Example)
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G1 Checkpoint (Detailed Example) Regulated by Cdk & cyclins, etc., but also controlled by a very special protein called p53 (made by gene p53) Specifically checks if DNA damaged If damaged, p53 signals other enzymes to repair it during G 0 If too badly damaged, p53 starts apoptosis
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Cancer A growth disorder of cells: when cell regulation (checkpoints) not functioning, so cells divide uncontrollably Creates a mass of cells called tumor Benign tumors are contained (won’t spread) can still grow large
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Cancer (cont’d) Malignant tumors will spread – cancer cells will break off tumor and travel through blood stream to start tumor elsewhere Process of spreading cells = metastasis
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Why is cancer bad? Tumor growth can put physical pressure on other important organs, etc. Cancer cells still need oxygen, glucose, blood, etc. to live Will send out signals to make blood vessels feed “useless” cancer cells (VEGF) Good cells die You die
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Causes of Cancer Chemicals (tobacco), radiation (UV rays) Damage/change DNA: mutation If specific damaged gene controls cell cycle (protein at checkpoint), may result in cancer Proto-oncogenes: stimulate cell division If mutated to work too much, turn into oncogenes (divide excessively) Tumor-suppressor genes: stop division If mutated to be non-functional, cell divides without control
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Causes of Cancer (example) p53 = tumor-suppressor gene if p53 mutated, p53 protein won’t function Won’t stop division if DNA bad Allow cell to make more cells with same mutated DNA that will make more cells! = CANCER So, what type of gene?
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Curing Cancer Conventional treatments: Surgery (remove tumor) – hard to remove ALL mestases (every little single cell) Chemotherapy/Radiation – to kill cancer cells (but will also kill good cells) Newer treatments Focus on fixing the gene or protein that was damaged/mutated that resulted in cancer cure for p53 cancer? Different cancers damage diff. genes
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