Term
What gene is over expressed in 80% of squamous cell carcinomas of the lung? |
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Definition
ERBB1 Part of the EGF receptor family |
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Term
What EGF receptor
is amplified in 25% of all breast cancers? |
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Definition
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Term
Name the common signal transducing oncoprotein gene family. What mutations in these genes cause cancer? |
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Definition
RAS. They are the link between growth factor receptors and nucleus mutated RAS has no autoGTPase activity so it remains constitutively active. |
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Term
the 9:22 ABL-BCR gene translocation is an example of a mutation of what>? |
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Definition
Non-receptor tyrosine kinase |
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Term
What is the most commonoly mutated trasncription factor in human tumors? |
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Definition
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Term
What type of mutation causes MYC proto-oncogene to become oncogenic? |
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Definition
gain of function and consitutive expression |
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Term
c-MYC in a normal cell is induced by ____? |
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Definition
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Term
What molecules are responsible for regulating progression through cell cycles? |
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Definition
cyclins and cyclin dependent kinases. |
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Term
how is the G1 --> S transition regulated? by what molecules is the process activated and inhibited? |
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Definition
CDK4 and CDK6 that phosphorylated Rb protein are activated by cyclin D and cyclin E. Inhibited by p15, p16 (aka CDKN2A), p18, and p19. |
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Term
Cancers associated with CDK4 amplification? |
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Definition
melanoma, sarcomas, and glioblastomas |
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Term
p15, p16, p18, and p19 are examples of what? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the two-hit hypothesis? Example of this? |
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Definition
states that there must be mutations in both alleles to produce the cancer effect. Example is retinoblastoma. inherit one mutated form and acquire the second --> cancer. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
does TGF-beta inhibit or promote G1->S transformation? |
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Definition
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Term
Loss of p53 functionality is present in how much cancer? What part of the protein is effected? |
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Definition
almost all DNA binding domain. |
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Term
Li-Fraumeni syndrome. Cause? effects? |
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Definition
inherited mutation of p53 on one allele. gives 25 fold increase in chance of developing cancer before 50 and causes a wide array of cancers. |
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Term
if p53 mutation is so important in the developement of cancer, if you don't have a p53 mutation, how can you still develop cancer in some cases? |
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Definition
mutation of MDM2 which tags ubiquitin to p53 and catalyzes its destruction. Typical of sarcomas. |
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Term
how is p53 used in treatment of cancer? |
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Definition
irradiation and chemo cause DNA damage that upregulates p53 --> apoptosis. |
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Term
mutation in what gene causes familial adenomatous polyposis? What is the function of this gene? |
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Definition
APC gene. Functions to downregulate growth promoting signals by binding to beta-catenin (growth inducer) and mediate its degradation. If APC isn't around, beta-catenin rises, binds to TCF, and upregulates proliferation. |
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Term
Describe the funcion of INK4a/ARF genes. |
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Definition
This gene can be alternatively spliced to produce the following: p16/INK4a - blocks D-CDK4 and D-CDK6 mediated phosphorylation of Rb p14/ARF - innhibits MDM2 to preventp53 degradation |
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Term
what is the mechanism of action of TGF-beta? |
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Definition
binds serine-threonin kinase -> phosphorylates R-Smads -> R-smads increase synthesis of CDKis, and decrease CDKs and c-MYC |
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Term
What is the role of the PTEN gene and protein? What mutation in this gene causes cancer and how? |
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Definition
PTEN is a membrane bound phosphatase that serves as a tumor suppressor gene by removing a phoshpate from the oncoprotein PIP3. Therefore, a loss of function mutation will predispose pt to cancer. |
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Term
What gene is over expressed in 80% of squamous cell carcinomas of the lung? |
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Definition
ERBB1 Part of the EGF receptor family |
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Term
what growth factor forms an autocrine loop in cancer to perpetuate growth? Which cancer is it associated with? |
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Definition
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Term
H. pylori infection causes chronic inflammatio of the gastric mucosa (gastritis). What cancer may develop from this? |
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Definition
Gastric carcinoma or MALT lymphoma |
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Term
define anaplasia and give a few characteristics of anaplastic cells? |
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Definition
lack of differentiation Pleomorphism - variation in size and shape of the cell abnormal nuclear morphology - darkly staining Atypical mitotic figures *** Tumor giant cells loss of polarity high nuclear:cytoplasm ratio (1:1 bad) |
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Term
define metaplasia and give two examples |
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Definition
changing of one cell type to another Barret's esophagus is a metaplastic change of the lower esophagus epithelium from squamous to columnar respiratory epithelium may change to stratified squamous in smokers |
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Term
dysplasia that takes up the whole epidermis is known as? |
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Definition
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Term
name 3 factors (identify the most important of the three) of rates of tumor growth |
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Definition
doubling time of cells fraction of tumor cells in proliferative pool *** Rate at which cells shed or die |
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Term
do benign tumors tend to have a fibrous capsule? |
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Definition
yes. think since they are benign, they must be separated from other tissues since they aren't invasive. |
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Term
What tumor generally doesn't metastisize? |
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Definition
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Term
name three pathways of metastatic spread? |
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Definition
1. seeding of body cavities (ovarian cancer) 2. lymphatic spread (most common dissemination path for carcinomas) 3. hematogenous spread (sarcomas) |
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Term
what is the major contributor to most cancer formation? |
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Definition
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Term
exposure to benzine predisposes you to what cancer? |
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Definition
leukemia and hodgkin's lymphoma |
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Term
define the term "marker phenotype" give two examples |
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Definition
clinical manifestation that readily indicates they have another disease. in this case the other disease is cancer. Ex is hundreds of colon polyps indicate familial adenomatous polyposis or cafe au lait spots indicating neurofibromatosis. |
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Term
hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancer (HNPCC) is an example of what gene mutation ? |
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Definition
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Term
Bcl-2 and Bcl-x are what? They acheive their function by doing what? |
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Definition
cell regulators of apoptosis. They promote cell survival. Block cytochrome c from leaking out of the mito and inducing apoptosis |
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Term
BH3 proteins cause what? by what mechanisms? |
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Definition
cause apoptosis by binding and inhibiting Bcl-2 and Bcl-x. Also BH3 proteins activate Bax and Bak which allow cyt c out of mito -> caspase 9 activation |
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Term
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Definition
open up mito channels for cyt c release and activation of caspase 9. |
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Term
What happens when Fas binds to FasL? |
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Definition
Three of more Fas are brought together and cytoplasmic death domains form to generate caspase 8 -> apoptosis |
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Term
What protein inhibits the extracellular apoptotic pathway? what part of the pathway is it involved with? |
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Definition
FLIP binds to pro-caspase 8 and prevents in proteolytic cleavage into its active form. |
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Term
Mechanisms employed by cancer to avoid apoptosis? 4 ways |
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Definition
decrease Fas expression increase FLIP expression Increase BCL-2 expression (common in B-Cell lymphomas) decrease p53 mutations. |
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Term
what enzyme activated in cancer gives limitless replicative potential? |
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Definition
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Term
In the absence of checkpoints, DNA-repair pathways are inappropriately activated, leading to the formation of dicentric chromosomes. During anaphase the dicentric chromosomes are pulled apart, generating random double-stranded breaks, which then activate DNA-repair pathways, leading to the random association of double-stranded ends and the reformation of dicentric chromosomes. Cells undergo numerous rounds of this bridge-fusion-breakage cycle, which results in marked chromosomal instability and numerous mutations. If cells fail to express telomerase, they eventually undergo mitotic catastrophe and death. Expression of telomerase allows cells to escape the bridge-fusion-breakage cycle, thus promoting their survival resulting in malignancy. |
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Definition
straight from the lecture. no other way |
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Term
define mitotic catastrophe |
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Definition
apoptosis resulting in mitosis from attempted asymmetric segregation of chromosomes |
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Term
what do tumors need in order to get bigger than 2 mm? |
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Definition
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Term
name the two major angiogenesis inducing factors and where they are located |
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Definition
basic fiberblast growth factor - located in the ECM VEGF - induced by hypoxia (HIF1a) and located in the cell. |
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Term
what are the two steps of the metastatic cascade? |
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Definition
invasion of the ECM and vascular dissemination, homing, and colonization |
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Term
what molecules does cancer frequently down regulate in order to begin metastisis and invade the ECM? |
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Definition
e-cadherin - holds cells together. Integrins - holds cells to ECM |
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Term
what cell surface marker is used by metastatic cancer cells to adhere to distant sites and to what receptor? |
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Definition
CD44 is cancer adhesion molecule that binds to hyaluronic acid on the surface of host cells. |
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Term
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Definition
chemokine receptor implicated in the metastases of breast cancer. |
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Term
HNPCC results from what defect? Characteristic DNA features? |
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Definition
DNA mutation of DNA mismatch repair. possess lots of CACA microsatellites |
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Term
BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes are used for what? |
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Definition
homologous recombination DNA repair of INTRASTRAND AND INTERSTRAND DNA CROSS LINKS |
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Term
Define the Warburg Effect |
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Definition
in the presence of ample oxygen, cancercells shift glucose metabolism away from OxPhos to aerobic glycolysis |
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Term
What is the explanation for the Warburg Effect |
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Definition
Halting oxidation of glucose as pyruvate increases carbon availability for anabolic use. The limit for cell division is carbon availability, not ATP availability |
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Term
most chromosomal abnormalities are seen in what type of malignancies? What are the types of chromosomal abnormaliteis seen? |
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Definition
lymphoma and leukemias. translocations (most common) inversions |
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Term
What genetic abnormality is seen in Burkitt's lymphoma ? |
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Definition
t(8;14) translocation results in MYC gene moved next to IgH gene -> MYC overexpression |
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Term
What genetic abnormality causes follicular lymphoma? |
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Definition
t(14;18) that places Bcl-2 gene next to IgH gene -> overexpression of Bcl-2 |
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Term
What genetic abnormality is presend in CML (chronic myeloid leukemia)? |
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Definition
the "philidelphia chromosome". t(9;22) ABL-BCR fusion gene -> overactive tyrosine kinase causes 90% of myeloid leukemia. |
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Term
Chromosomal deletions leading to cancer are more common in what kind of tumors? |
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Definition
non-hematopoeitic solid tumors ex. is retinoblastoma deletion of 13q14 |
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Term
define epigenetics What are the effects of methylation and histone modification? |
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Definition
heritable reversible changes to DNA without mutation Methylation silences genes Histone acetylation unwids DNA and upregulates expression. |
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Term
2 examples of genes silenced by hypermethylation |
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Definition
p16/INK4a BRCA1 VHL (renal cell carcinoma) MLH1 (colorectal cancer) |
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Term
name the enzyme that modifies histones to silence the tumor suppressor gene p21. what cancer it is indicated in? |
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Definition
EZH2 and breast/prostate carcinoma. |
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Term
Chemical carcinogenesis occurs by two steps |
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Definition
Inititiation - initial DNA damage Promotion - initiated cell is stimulated to proliferate |
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Term
What enzyme system is involved in the conversion of pro-carcinogens into carcinogens? |
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Definition
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Term
Which spectrum of light is considered to be most carcinogenic? |
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Definition
UVB forming pyrimidine dimers |
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Term
The three most typically malignancies induced by radiation are what? |
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Definition
leukemia, thyroid carcinoma, lung/breast/salivary carcinoma |
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Term
HTLV-1 (human T Cell Leukemia Virus Type 1)
What does it do to pass the G1-S transition? |
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Definition
virus that infects CD4 cells. Encodes tax gene that inhibits p16/INK4a and upregulates cyclin D formation. |
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Term
HPV Type of virus? High risk types? oncoproteins produced by HPV |
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Definition
DNA virus. High risk types are 16 and 18. HPV E6 and E7 are the oncoproteins |
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Term
Role of HPV viral oncoproteins E6 and E7. |
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Definition
blocks p53, p21, cyclin D, and Rb. |
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Term
Epstein-Barr Virus (EBV) Member of what family? Infects what cells? Causes which cancers? |
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Definition
herpes family B Cells, and epithelial cells Burkitt Lymphoma (overexpress LMP and EBNA2) B-Cell lymphoma (immunocompromised) Nasopharyngeal carcinoma |
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Term
Name the two genes of EBV and what they do? |
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Definition
LMP-1 - transmembrane which functions as a CD40 receptor (survival signal) EBNA2 - transcription factor that upregulates cyclin D |
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Term
what is Burkitt Lymphoma?
Caused by what?
Associated with what infection? |
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Definition
neoplasm of B lymphocytes. Endemic disease is associated w/ EBV. possess t(8;14) translocation |
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Term
what causes 70-85% of hepatocellular carcinomas? |
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Definition
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Term
first bacterium classified as a carcinogen? |
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Definition
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Term
What gene in H. Pylori is associated with increased risk of adenocarcinoma? |
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Definition
CagA - activates growth factor signal transduction |
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Term
Examples of tumor antigens |
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Definition
1. products of mutated genes 2. overexpressed cellular proteins 3. Ags made by oncogenic viruses 4. Oncofetal proteins 5. Altered cell surface glycolipids or glycoproteins 6. Cell type specific antigens |
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Term
Mechanisms for evading immune serveillance |
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Definition
1. selective outgrowth of antigen negative variants 2. loss or reduced expression of mHC molecules 3. lack of costimulation 4. immunosuppression 5. apoptosis of cytotoxic T Cells |
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Term
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Definition
loss of body fat and lean body mass, weakness, anemia. Not caused by the demands of the tumor or the induced anorexia. Caused by cytokines, proteolysis inducing factor, lipid mobilizing factor. |
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Term
define paraneoplastic syndrome |
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Definition
symptoms or signs of cancer that cannot be explained by local invasion or distant spread of tumor. |
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Term
What causes paraneoplastic syndromes? |
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Definition
tumor secreting substances such as hormones and cytokines as well as the host immune response to the tumor. |
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Term
name cancer associated with the following paraneoplastic syndromes. Cushings Syndrome
Hypercalcemia
Polycythemia
Trousseau Syndrome (migratory thrombophlebitis)
Autoimmune hemolytic anemia
Acanthosis Nigricans |
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Definition
cushings -> small cell carcinoma of the lung
hypercalcemia -> squamous cell carcinoma of the lung Polycythemia ->renal cell carcinoma
Trousseau Syndrome -> pancreatic adenocarcinoma Autoimmune Hemolytic anemia -> lymphoma Acanthosis Nigricans -> adenocarcinoma of GI |
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Term
Grading of tumors is based on what? |
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Definition
histologic appearance Degree of anaplasia Architectural features Mitotic index |
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Term
Staging of tumors is based on what? |
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Definition
TNM system T - primary tumore N - lymph node involvment M - metastases |
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Term
Tumor markers are defined as what? Useful for what purpose? |
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Definition
tumor markers are products secreted by tumors that can be assay for in the pt's blood or other fluids Used for detection, determining efficacy of treatment, and monitoring for recurrence |
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