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Summary Lecture 11 - Cancer

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Summary of 3 pages for the course Biochemistry and Molecular Biology II at RU (Lecture 11 - Cancer)

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Biochemistry and Molecular Biology II – Lecture 11 (29-5-18): Cancer by Joost
Martens

07-08-2016:
Lecture opnieuw teruggekeken:

Conversion of a proto-oncogene into an oncogene generally involves a gain-of-
function mutation:
This can happen via:
1. Point mutation  hyperactive or constitutively active (missense, nonsense,
silent)
2. Chromosomal translocation  chimeric proteins  constitutively active
3. Chromosomal translocation  different promoter usage  inappropriate
expression
4. Amplification of DNA segment  overproduction of encoded protein

Gain of function mutations are often dominant  one mutated gene allele already
induces cancer.

Loss-of-function mutations of tumor suppressor genes:
- Proteins that somehow inhibit cell proliferation

Loss of function mutations are genetically recessive  both alleles must be
lost/inactivated!!!!

Hallmarks of cancer:
1. Sustaining proliferative signaling
2. Evading growth suppressors
Counteract tumor suppressor genes such as Rb and tp53
Hypermethylation  leads to a gene becoming silent, because of the formation of
heterochromatin

3. Resisting cell death
- Elevated levels of anti-apoptosis protein BCL-2 (proto-oncogene)
- Loss of p53  normally: ATM complex phosphorylates p53  activates p21
- When MDM2 binds to p53  it targets p53 for proteasomal degradation. This
means that the tumor-suppressor function of p53 is inhibited, which makes
MDM2 an oncogene.

4. Enabling replicative immortality
5. Inducing angiogenesis
6. Activating invasion and metastasis
- Loss of E-cadherin  E-cadherins normally regulate cell-cell interactions.

*You need multiple hits in order to get cancer  accumulation of mutations.

Driver/passenger mutations:
Driver mutations: mutations that drive tumor and cancer progression.
Passenger mutations: other mutations can occur during the process of
tumorigenesis, which have no beneficial effect for the cancer.

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