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Tumour suppressor genes

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Lecture notes with PowerPoint slides and personal notes added. This lecture material is on tumour suppressor genes and explains on a molecular level what happens when these genes function properly and what happens when they don't.

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  • March 21, 2024
  • 9
  • 2023/2024
  • Class notes
  • Dr laslo bogre
  • Lecture 3; tumour suppressor genes
  • Unknown
avatar-seller
BS3540

Cancer

Lecture 3: Tumour suppress genes


Cell fusion experiment:
- Because viral and cellular oncogenes can overrule cellular
processes like normal proliferation, they induce dominant
phenotype.
- Normal cells carry genes that constrain or suppress their
proliferation (tumour suppressor genes (TSG).
- Once these growth-suppressing genes are lost the proliferation of
cancer cells is no longer held back
- Recessive: the function of both copies ought to be lost
- Somatic culture cells; end up fusing (two diploid cells)
- Mutations have a certain probability; 1 in a million
Likelihood/cell generation
Mutation one copy: 106
Both copies: 1012



The retinoblastoma:
- In the eye
- 1:20,000 case
- Familial cancer
- The inheritance of mutant tumour suppressors greatly increases
cancer risk; GATEKEEPERS. RETINOBLASTOMA (RB)
- Not all familiar cancer is due to mutations in tumour suppressors,
another large class is in genome maintenance: CARETAKERS p53

- Bilateral = always inherited from parents; will pick up
mutation on the second chromosome by first somatic
mutation

- Uni lateral = not familial. Pick up one mutation then during
a lifetime, pick up a second mutation; so is chance based




Mitotic recombination:

, - Loss of RB heterozygosity after mitotic recombination
- Frequency of mitotic recombination 10-5-10-4
- Endogamy (breeding within a group) increases homologue regions and mitotic
recombination
- Occurs during meiosis and in somatic cells
- Exchange between sections of the chromosome, then segregate into separate chromosome
arms


Gene conversion:
- More frequent than mitotic
recombination
- Exchange of genetic material between
homologous chromosomes
- During DNA synthesis
- Borrow DNA from another
chromosome




DNA methylation: Epigenetic mechanism for controlling gene expression:
- Methylated CpGs
enable recruitment of
histone deacetylase
(HDAC) that removes
acetyl modifications
from core histones,
alters chromatin
structure to a more
closed-repressed
heterochromatin form
that blocks transcription.
- Inappropriate methylation in promoter regions might silence gene copies.
- Inappropriate methylation provides an important mechanism of shutting down tumour-
suppressor genes
- Don’t necessarily need a mutation and silences the other copy
The cell cycle clock:

- Master governor that integrates a variety of
incoming signals and decides whether the cell
should enter the cell cycle or retreat into non-
proliferating state (quiescent or post mitotic).
- After this decision has been made in governs the
circuitry of program that enable DNA synthesis in
S-phase and chromosome segregation in mitosis
leading to the formation of two daughter cells
after cytokinesis.
- Cell growth + cell division = proliferation

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