Chapter 14 and 15 (exam 3) Flashcards

1
Q

cancer

A
  • uncontrolled cell growth producing a population of cells that can invade surrounding and distant tissues
  • generally caused by successive mutations - change in genetic material that can be inherited during cell division
  • placement on DNA matters -

–fatal mutation kills the cell (cannot become cancer)

–growth and identity

–codon redundancy

–intron/exon

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2
Q

proto-oncogenes

A
  • regulatory genes
  • mutation of genes associated with cell signaling, regulation of growth and cell identity are critical for initiation of cancer
  • mutated proto-oncogene becomes an oncogene
  • oncogenes - damaged gene that is characteristic of a tumor-forming cell population
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3
Q

tumor suppressor genes

A
  • inhbit cell proliferation or help to eliminate mutated cells
  • can disrupt apoptosis
  • contact inhibition - cells will grow to the space provided

–regulatory process

–occurs in cell culture/dish

–receptors on cells that cause contact inhibition

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4
Q

Environmental causes

A
  • 70-90% human cancers are related to environmental exposures
  • diet, tobacco, infection, SDI, occupation
  • as populations migrate, assume the cancer profile of the new population

–japanese men in CA follow CA trends, different than Japanese men in Japan

–attribute to environment

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5
Q

Dose Response for Cancer

A

-Generally follows the logarithmic model

-linear curve begins at the origin

–one molecule could effect a single cell that reproduces and the mutated gene is inherited

–very unlikely

–often need multiple mutations

–bypass many regulatory processes

–need to accumulate damage

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6
Q

DNA adduct

A

N-7 on guanine is the most nucleophilic on DNAm therefore most suseptible to reactive electrophiles

  • effect the transcription proteins - mutation - potentially change codon - change AA - altered protein - impact the fucntion or tertiary structure
  • effect is perminent when replicated w/o being repaired. larger effect
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7
Q

-DNA mutations

A
  • insertion or deletion of a base pair
  • grameshift mutation - effect all downstream codons

–nonsense protein which is completely different than the original

  • change the reading frame
  • may introduce a premature stop codon
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8
Q

PAH Carcinogen

A

-Acetulaminofluorene adducts onto guanine

–3 possible ways, various sterics

-Aflatoxin adducts - mycotoxin (produced by fungus) can grow on peanuts

–adducts onto N-7 og guanine via an epoxide.

–activated by phase I

-Benzo[a]pyrene - epoxide - diol epoxide - adduct to DNA - G to T mutation that is resistant to excision repair (due to sterics)

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9
Q

Initiators

A

provide genetic damge, physically or chemically interact with DNA

  • change must be heritable and must impact a gene that is related to growth or identity of the cell
  • generally reactive compounds (ROS, RNS, alkylating agents) or forms of radiation (UV, xray, gamma)

–UV - dimerization, cross linking of strands, energy impacts the bond

–Xray and gamma - can ionize an atom, change bonds

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10
Q

Promotion

A
  • allows for proliferation of cells following initiation
  • NOT mutagenic
  • can be reversible, decrease exposure, decrease proliferation
  • hormones, pharmaceuticals, natural products(mycotoxins)
  • must occur AFTER initiation or there is no effect

–genetic damage leads to susceptibility, then promoter provides a signal that depends on susceptibility

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11
Q

Progression

A

-further accumulation of genetic damage decreases growth regulation and results in tumor formation

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12
Q

Carcinogen Classification

A
  • indirect - parent compund does not directly interact with DNA ex (benzo[a]pyrene)
  • proximate - result of metabolism, but not the form that reacts with DNA
  • ultimate - final metabolite that reacts with DNA
    example: B[a]p, B[a]p diol, B[a]p diol epoxide
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13
Q

Ames Test

A
  • Salmonella typhimurium
  • strain is histidine dependent, cannot synthesize it alone due ot point mutation in a single enzyme
  • random mutation can reverse and make it histidine independent (revertant cell or reversion)
  • grow in a histidine media, expose to potential mutagen, cells grown without histidine, cells that continue to grow have been mutated by the mutagen, compare to the control to account for spontaneous reversions
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14
Q

Ames Metabolic

A
  • assay cannot detect mutagens that require metabolic activation
  • conduct with external enzymes (liver S9 fraction)
  • S9 contains microsomes and metabolic enzymes, P450
  • metabolize the potential mutagen
  • realistic conditions
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15
Q

Chronic 2 year Rodent Bioassay

A
  • primary method to assess human risk
  • covers lifespan of the animal
  • uses 2-3 dosing levels
  • high dose near the maximum tolerated dose
  • dosing begins at 6 weeks through lifespan
  • tumors are quantified in all organs
  • 2 years needed to accumulate the mutations that will manifest into uncontrolled cell growth and a tumor
  • max tolerated dose is just before death or other major negative effect
  • max tolerated dose may be large difference from realistic exposure
  • hard to generate a false negative, but increase chance of a false positive
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16
Q

Human biomonitoring

A

ASSOCIATION IS NOT CAUSATION

  • isolating variables to attribute causation
  • multiple routes fo exposure and potential stressors
  • confoundign factors of diet, lifestyle
  • can measure chemical residues in blood and urine - including protein and DNA adducts
17
Q

Asbestos

A
  • inorganic material forms fiber
  • inhaled into LRT and irritates the tissues
  • body will not degrade the fibers
  • unknown mechanism but linked to mesothelioma
18
Q

Asbestos Mechanism

A
  • NOT mutagenic
  • Chronic inflammation due to asbestos, morphology of crystals
  • damaged cells undergo programmed cell death (apoptosis)
  • Difference between apoptosis and necrosis leads to carcinogenesis
  • apoptosis is orderly breakdown of cells
  • necrosis can be regulated or not
  • regulated necrosis - HMGB1 protein released from nucleus and enters cytosol - released into surrounding tissues
  • HMGB1 promotes inflammation - macrophages are released in response to inflammation - release ROS (H2O2) can damage DNA - proliferate and form tumors
  • apoptosis retains the HMGB1 protein in the nucleus
  • CHRONIC process to accumulate damaged DNA, low probability events become significant
  • Increase HMGB1 serum levels