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Introduction to Cancer Biology: Genetic and Cellular Mechanisms

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This document provides an overview of the biological foundations of cancer, focusing on the genetic and cellular processes involved in tumor development and progression. It covers the differences between benign, malignant, and metastatic tumors, highlights the role of environmental factors and age in cancer incidence, and explains how cell division errors contribute to cancer. Key genetic components are discussed, including tumor suppressor genes (e.g., p53, RB, BRCA1/2) and oncogenes, along with the concept of angiogenesis in tumor growth. The document emphasizes that most cancers result from the accumulation of mutations in multiple genes over time.

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Uploaded on
March 30, 2025
Number of pages
1
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Lee
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All classes

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● Mass of cells with unlimited potential to divide/grow and serves no useful function in the
body
● Rarely heritable, but genetic

Tumor - distinct mass of abnormal cells that do not have normal controls on cell division
Benign - do not invade surrounding tissue (remain localized)
Malignant - invade surrounding tissue
Metastatic - cancer cells spreada and establish secondary tumors in other sites

● Most cancers are sporadic and influenced by the environment
- Siblings are rarely affected by the same cancer
● Cancers also develop over time
- Changes in cancer rates due to new environment tend to take decades
- Incidence of cancer rises with age


High incidents of Cancer correlate with tissues that undergo more cell divisions (result of error in
replication)

Tumor suppressor genes:
- Normal gene prevents uncontrolled growth
- Abnormal gene - no inhibition - results in tumor if no normal allele is present

RB Gene: G1 to S transition
- Prevents E2F(transcription factor) gene from activating replication
- BRCA 1 and BRCA 2 are used to repair double strand breaks

Tumor Suppressor p53
- Function at g1 checkpoint
- Mutated form seen in diverse cancer types: colon, lung, breast, brain and 50% of human
tumors
- P53 delays cell division until damage is repaired or programs cell to die

Oncogenes
● Proto-oncogenes: promote cell division, but are activated to regulate properly
● Mutates to become oncogene (uncontrolled division)’

Most cancers are not due to defects in one gene, but accumulatins of several genes
Angiogenesis (growth of blood vessels) : important to tumor progression (may be inactivated or
underexpressed)
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