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Hereditary Cancer

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Heredity-related cancers involve two types of genes: ones that display the inability to repair cellular damage or are lacking entirely, and others that engage in unmitigated proliferation. Hereditary cancers are particularly insidious because there is little one can do to prevent them, unlike avoiding an environmental carcinogen or virus that causes cancer such as HPV.

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Running head: HEREDITARY CANCER 1




Hereditary Cancer

Heredity-related cancers involve two types of genes: ones that display the inability to

repair cellular damage or are lacking entirely, and others that engage in unmitigated

proliferation. Hereditary cancers are particularly insidious because there is little one can do to

prevent them, unlike avoiding an environmental carcinogen or virus that causes cancer such as

HPV. Examples of such cancers include some types of breast cancer and Lynch Syndrome.

Gene therapy is still a long ways away, so we can only treat these forms of cancers with radiation

and chemotherapy, making the study of hereditary cancers particularly relevant to cancer

researchers. So as we can see, Heredity-related cancers involve inherited defective or lacking

genes, and raise significant ethical and research challenges.

Defective genes interfere with the normal growth of cells. Damaged or mutated tumor

suppressor genes deregulate the progression of the cell cycle as well as interfere with cellular

adhesion (Hesketh, 1997). Oncogenes control signaling pathways when they function normally,

but when they are defective they are similar to a car missing its breaks. Finally, DNA repair

enzymes can also play a role, leading to mutations that can also support cellular instability.

Heredity’s role in genetic cancers was suspected in the late 19th century, when it was

noted cancer could run in families (Mukherjee, 2011). However, it was the mid-twentieth century

when the discoveries of gene abnormalities were implicated in cancer. For example, BRCA 1

and 2 mutations were not discovered until 1994 and 1995, respectively (Jacobs, 2009). Even

though the identification of genetic involvement is still relatively new, it will be demonstrated

that this technology can have far-reaching implications for quality of life and family planning.

Robert Weinberg was the first individual to isolate the ras gene, which is an oncogene, in

1972 at MIT. He did this by meticulously sheering DNA into thousands of pieces, inserting

, Running head: HEREDITARY CANCER 2


these pieces into normal cells, and waiting to see if foci appears (a “focus” of dense, proliferating

cells) (Mukherjee, 2011). Tumor suppressor genes proved more difficult to isolate because they

are significant because of their absence. A clinician named Thad Dryja was able to locate these

deletions because he had a vast store of tissue samples. By looking at small pieces of genes

called probes on the outside of chromosomes, Dryja could find two deletions on the Rb gene on

the same chromosome (Mukherjee, 2011). Because one working, present gene can take up the

slack, so to speak, he knew he had uncovered an absent tumor suppressor gene. In this case, the

cancer caused was retinoblastoma, a devastating cancer that causes eye removal(s) or death at an

early age. It is one thing to see a genetic abnormality in a petri dish, but it is far worse when

these mutations affect living beings with a sense of self-awareness, and worse, the ability to pass

on that legacy in their linage.

A woman being diagnosed with breast and ovarian cancers is a frightening proposition,

evoking images of disfigurement and lost fertility. However, men can inherit these same

defective genes and also develop cancer in their breast tissue. BRCA1 and BRCA2 are in the

tumor suppressor gene category, so they fail to cull mutations that lead to cancer from the body if

they are mutated. Ordinarily, they prevent the development of cancer by stopping unregulated

growth. BRCA mutations can also increase the odds of developing cervical, uterine, pancreatic,

and colon cancer (National Cancer Institute, 2009).

These genes show a dominant vs. recessive inheritance pattern, meaning that only one set

of the defective gene has to be present in order to express itself. However, since everyone

inherits four copies of the gene, individuals can also be carriers. “Epidemiological studies

estimate a twofold risk in close relatives to breast cancer cases, averaged across all ages, and

twin studies suggest a genetic origin” (Borg, p. S5, 2005). A woman’s odds of developing

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Uploaded on
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