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GMS 6540 Cancer Exam Questions With Complete Answers

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GMS 6540 Cancer Exam Questions With Complete Answers...

Institution
GMS 6540
Course
GMS 6540

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GMS 6540 Cancer Exam Questions With
Complete Answers

What causes a cancer cell to go rogue? - ANSWER chemicals, virus, radiation

What are the steps when a cancer goes rogue? - ANSWER 1) normal cell then a
genetic change to initiated cell.
2) initiated cell then selective clonal expansion to pre-neoplastic lesion.
3) Pre-neoplastic lesion then genetic change to malignant tumor
4) Malignant tumor then genetic change to clinical cancer
5) clinical cancer then genetic change to cancer metastasis

Hallmark #1 - ANSWER Self-Sufficiency in Growth Signals

Hallmark #1 means - ANSWER Self-Sufficiency in Growth Signals

Cell growth is normally tightly regulated, requiring a pro-growth signal.

Cancer cells bypass this requirement in a number of ways

How does cell signaling work? - ANSWER Pro-growth molecule (ligand) binds to
extracellular domain

Intracellular domain becomes active

Signaling cascade proceeds

Pro-growth proteins are transcribed

How do cancer cells become self-sufficient? - ANSWER Abnormal ligand
production, autocrine (self) signaling

Induced paracrine (external) signaling

Upregulated receptor levels

Mutation-induced constitutive signaling

Hallmark #2 - ANSWER Insensitivity to Anti-Growth Signals

Normal cells need to overcome anti-growth signals in order to divide

,Anti-growth signals can be both normal and/or induced

Anti-growth signals can originate either internally or externally

Hallmark #3 - ANSWER Unstable DNA

This is an "enabling" hallmark

Required for tumor progression

Can lead to drug resistance

If DNA became stable, the tumor would survive

Two main forms of DNA instability: Genetic Instability and Chromosomal
Instability

Hallmark #4: - ANSWER Metastasis

The transmission of cancer cells from the original site to one or more sites
elsewhere in the body by the way of blood vessels or lymphatics

Hallmark #5 - ANSWER Evasion of Apoptosis

Apoptosis is a cell SUICIDE mechanism.

Its hallmarks are:
Cell volume loss
Membrane blebbing and formation of apoptotic bodies, DNA fragmentation and
condensation, Cytoskeleton collapse, Engulfment by immune cells, Non-
inflammatory

Hallmark #6 - ANSWER Abnormal Cellular Metabolism

• Most mammalian cells under normoxic conditions pursue oxidative
phosphorylation of glucose.
OXPHOS = 38 molecules of ATP/molecule of glucose.

Cancer cells in contrast metabolize glucose through glycolysis.
Glycolysis = 2 molecules of ATP/ molecule of glucose.

Phenomena of aerobic glycolysis in cancer cells was first observed by Nobel
Prize winner Otto Warburg
• Warburg Effect

Hallmark #7 - ANSWER Angiogenesis

, Angiogenesis occurs when there is an imbalance: the angiogenic switch

Hallmark #8 - ANSWER Inflammation

Hallmark #9 - ANSWER Evasion of the Immune System

Hallmark #10 - ANSWER Immortality

Antimetabolites - ANSWER 5-FU, Methotrexate

S phase: DNA synthesis

Phase-nonspecific drugs - ANSWER Active on cells in all phases of the cell
cycle:
alkylating agents (cyclophosphamide)
cross-linkers (cysplatin)
topoisomerase inhibitors (doxorubicin)

Phase-specific drugs - ANSWER Microtubule drugs(paclitaxel,vincristine)

Gompertzian growth - ANSWER Relationship between growth fraction and drug
action

Hemorrhagic cystitis - ANSWER Cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan®)

Neurotoxicity - ANSWER microtubule inhibitors (i.e., vincristine, paclitaxel)
Cisplatin

Cardiotoxicity - ANSWER Doxorubicin

Pulmonary fibrosis - ANSWER Bleomycin

Topo II inhibitor - ANSWER Doxorubicin

Microtubule inhibitor - ANSWER Vincristine

DHFR (Dihydrofolate reductase) inhibitor - ANSWER Methotrexate

DNA cross-linking drug - ANSWER Mephalan, cisplatin

COMBINATION CHEMOTHERAPY:GOLDIE-COLDMAN HYPOTHESIS - ANSWER
Hypothesis: The frequency of drug resistance is related to the intrinsic mutation
rate
Tumors have a higher intrinsic mutation rate (increased genetic instability)
relative to normal proliferating cells

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