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Published byJesse Long Modified over 8 years ago
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Control of cell division/Cancer
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Figure 12.1 The functions of cell division Reproduction Growth and development Tissue repair
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Figure 12.5 The cell cycle
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Figure 12.4 Chromosome duplication and distribution during mitosis
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Figure 12.5 The cell cycle
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Figure 16.12 Origins of replication in eukaryotes
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Figure 12.5 The cell cycle
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Figure 12.6 The stages of mitotic cell division in an animal cell: G 2 phase; prophase; prometaphase
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Figure 12.6 The stages of mitotic cell division in an animal cell: metaphase; anaphase; telophase and cytokinesis.
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Cytokinesis in plants.
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Cell Cycle control The interesting stuff! –How do cells “decide” whether and when to divide? –Checkpoints –What happens when cell cycle control is lost?
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Figure 12.5 The cell cycle
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Figure 12.14 Mechanical analogy for the cell cycle control system Figure 12.15 The G1 checkpoint
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Cell and Organismal Biology 2009
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Figure 12.13 Evidence for cytoplasmic chemical signals in cell cycle regulation
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Figure 12.16 Molecular control of the cell cycle at the G 2 checkpoint MPF-Mitosis promoting factor
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Figure 12.17 The effect of a growth factor on cell division Fetal Calf Serum Experiment Results
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Figure 12.18 Density-dependent inhibition of cell division
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Loss of control of the cell cycle: Cancer
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Types of Cancer Epithelial cell tumors (Carcinoma) –Adenoma-benign –Adenocarcinoma-malignant glandular Connective tissue or muscle cell tumors (Sarcoma) –Chondroma-benign –Chondrosarcoma-malignant cartilage tumor Others –Leukemias and nervous system cancers
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Progression of tumor size- Breast cancer doubling time is 100 days Mammogram: normal (left) and cancerous (right)
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Cancers are progressive Epithelial cell tumor
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Steps in the process of metastasis
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Papanicolaou test “Pap smear” A. Normal cells- well differentiated B. Precancerous-abnormal differentiation C. Invasive carcinoma-undifferentiated
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Cancer incidence as a function of age Colon cancer in women in England and Wales Suggests multiple mutations required to induce cancer
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So how is cancer caused? Genes involved in cell cycle regulation are mutated
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Genes controlling cell division that can cause cancer Oncogenes- these are mutated proto-oncogenes which push cells towards cell division (GF receptors, myc, ras etc) Tumor-suppressor genes-these are genes that stop cells from dividing (retinoblastoma, p53 APC etc)
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Importance of Structure-an example P53 Mutated in 50% of all human cancers
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Cell and Organismal Biology 2009
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Figure 19.11 Genetic changes that can turn proto-oncogenes into oncogenes
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Genes controlling cell division that can cause cancer Oncogenes- these are mutated proto-oncogenes which push cells towards cell division (GF receptors, myc, ras etc) –ras-mutated in 20-30% of all cancers –GF receptors-increased in number in many breast cancers –src kinase- mutated/affected in 2-5% of cancers Tumor-suppressor genes- these are genes that stop cells from dividing –P53-mutated in 50% of cancers –Rb-mutated in 40% of cancers
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Genes controlling cell division that can cause cancer Oncogenes- these are mutated proto-oncogenes which push cells towards cell division (GF receptors, myc, ras etc) –ras-mutated in 20-30% of all cancers –GF receptors-increased in number in many breast cancers –src kinase- mutated/affected in 2-5% of cancers Tumor-suppressor genes- these are genes that stop cells from dividing –P53-mutated in 50% of cancers –Rb-mutated in 40% of cancers
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Science, Vol 274. Oct 18,1996. p430
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Types and causes of mutations Rearrangements –Ionizing radiation- forms free radicals that damage DNA Translocation Duplications Inversions deletions –Spontaneous mutagenesis- slipped mispairing Point mutations –UV light- pyrimidine dimers –Chemical mutagenesis
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Figure 16.17 Nucleotide excision repair of DNA damage Xeroderma pigmentosum
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Chemical mutagenesis
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Ames test Aflatoxin-from the fungus aspergillus that grows on rotting peanuts
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Viruses cause cancer RNA viruses (retroviruses). Cause cancer by adding oncogenes to cells. –Pick up RNA copies of proto-oncogenes and transfer them to other cells by infection DNA viruses. Cause cancer by blocking tumor-suppressor proteins.
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Figure 19.13 Genetic changes that can turn proto-ocogenes into oncogenes
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Viruses cause cancer RNA viruses (retroviruses). Cause cancer by adding oncogenes to cells. DNA viruses. Cause cancer by blocking tumor-suppressor proteins. –Viruses produce proteins that bind to p53 and RB
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DNA viruses produce proteins that block tumor- suppressor action. Normal Virus infected (SV40/papillomavirus)
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Not all cancers are alike!
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