La nuova biologia.blu Anatomia e fisiologia dei viventi S

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Basics Of Cancer* By Aoife Rafferty* Catherine Quaile* Kayleigh Powderly*
Advertisements

Bio 130 Human Biology Cancer Normal cells have regulation that keeps their rates of cell division in check. Normal cells generally remain in one location.
Cancer.
Genomics Lecture 7 By Ms. Shumaila Azam. Tumor Tumor – abnormal proliferation of cells that results from uncontrolled, abnormal cell division A tumor.
CELL DIVISION AND CANCER Unit 7 - Mitosis. Mitosis  All cells in your body divide  In children and teens, cells divide to assist in growth  In adults,
Cancer “Mitosis Gone Wild”.
Cancer Biology Ms. Sneha Singh Department of Zoology, DAVCG, Yamunanagar.
Cancer What is cancer? How does it form? How can it be treated?
Understanding Cancer and Related Topics
Mitosis & Cancer: When Making New Cells Goes Terribly Wrong!
Cancer AN INTRODUCTION Cancer - An Introduction 1.
What is cancer? Is it contagious?
Your “Do Now” 3/19 Take a paper from up front
SC430 Molecular Cell Biology
Understanding Cancer. What Is Cancer? Different Kinds of Cancer Lung Breast (women) Colon Bladder Prostate (men) Some common sarcomas: Fat Bone Muscle.
SC121 Unit Three Karma Pace, MS AIM: kpacemcduffy.
Cancer A Disease Resulting from Uncontrolled Cell Growth.
10.3 Regulation.
How can cancer be prevented? How is cancer treated? How are cancer cells different from normal cells? What causes cancer? How does this happen? What is.
Understanding Cancer Developed by: Lewis J. Kleinsmith, Ph.D. Donna Kerrigan, M.S. Jeanne Kelly Brian Hollen.
Cancer When cell division goes wrong……. Growing out of control, cancer cells produce malignant tumors Cancer is a general term for many diseases in.
Cancer Cancer is one of the most common diseases in the developed world: Cancer is one of the most common diseases in the developed world: 1 in 4 deaths.
Cancer Notes. What is cancer? Cancer develops when cells in the body begin to grow out of control.
What is Cancer??. Cancer The name for disease(s) in which the body's cells become abnormal and uncontrollably divide.
Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT
CANCER - a public health issue. epidemiology the study of the patterns, causes, and effects of health and disease conditions in defined populations informs.
Ultraviolet (UV) rays can put a person at risk for developing cancer. How does each item in the picture help protect you from UV rays? Cancer.
Cancer: Uncontrolled Cell Division Biology 12. Some Stats from WHO: Cancer is a leading cause of death group worldwide and accounted for 7.4 million deaths.
Cancer and Genetic Engineering. Cancer Definition: Cells that divide uncontrollably and form masses of abnormal cells that invade normal tissue.
By: Anthony, Sophia, Jessica, Terrance, and Sierra.
NOTES: Regulating the Cell Cycle / Cell Differentiation
Cancer What is cancer? uncontrolled cell growth that leads to the formation of primary tumors cells that spread (metastasize) to other areas of the body.
CANCER.
Cancer Thursday: Exam Bring: Pencil and green scantron.
Aim: How can mitosis lead to a disruption in homeostasis?
Cell Division Gone Wrong Cancer.  Cancer is a disease of uncontrolled cell division. It starts with a single cell that loses its control mechanisms due.
…cells that cannot control their growth rate and continue to divide without dying o This forms tumors o Cells usually invade nearby tissue and often spread.
Chapter  Definition: An abnormal and uncontrolled growth of cells that can lead to death  Tumor: A mass of tissue that serves no physiological.
CANCER.
What it is and how it’s formed
How are they related to Cell Cycle?
Aim: How can mitosis lead to a disruption in homeostasis?
Aim: How can mitosis lead to a disruption in homeostasis?
What is it? How is it treated? What makes a person susceptible to it?
Cancer progresses through accumulation of multiple mutations
CELL DIVISION GOING WRONG: Cancer
Aim # 51: How can mitosis lead to a
Jeopardy Testing 1, 2, 3 She Has The Cancer Radiation or Chemo?
CANCER What do you need to know??
Cancer.
Introduction to Cancers
(controls, checkpoints, and cancer)
Chapter 5.2: Cancer.
How do cells know when to divide?
CELL DIVISION GONE WILD!
Cancer (3:23) Click here to launch video
Ultraviolet (UV) rays can put a person at risk for developing cancer.
SNC 2D Cancer.
BT08.01 Cell Biology and Cancer
CELL DIVISION GOING WRONG: Cancer
Notes: Regulating the Cell Cycle
Cancer: Uncontrolled Cell Division
Section 3: Regulation Preview Bellringer Key Ideas Controls
Do Now 1/28 Complete the bellwork and glue on page 26 of INB.
Chapter 31, Lesson 2 CANCER.
Regulating the Cell Cycle – Notes 10.3
Cancer Lesson 3.
Objectives: 1. Cancer and the cell cycle checkpoints, reqmts to advance oncogenes tumor suppressor genes 2. 6 Traits of cancerous cells 3. Facts on.
Presentation transcript:

La nuova biologia.blu Anatomia e fisiologia dei viventi S David Sadava, David M. Hillis, H. Craig Heller, May R. Berenbaum La nuova biologia.blu Anatomia e fisiologia dei viventi S

Cancer Biology

What is cancer? Cancer is a collection of related diseases. In all types of cancer, some of the body’s cells begin to divide without stopping and spread into surrounding tissues. Cancerous tumors are malignant, which means they can spread into, or invade, nearby tissues. Unlike malignant tumors, benign tumors do not spread into nearby tissues.

Carcinomas are formed by epithelial cells. What is cancer? Carcinomas are formed by epithelial cells. Sarcomas are cancers that form in bones and soft tissues (muscle, fat, blood vessels, lymph vessels, fibrous tissue). Leukemias are the cancers that begin in the blood-forming tissues of the bone marrow. There are also different types of brain and spinal cord tumors that are named based on the type of cell in which they formed.

Biological characteristics of cancer cells: Grow under control What is cancer? Biological characteristics of cancer cells: Grow under control Ignore growth signals Ignore stop signals Become invasive Able to evade the immune system Less specialized than normal cells Have unstable DNA

Cancer depends on mutations Cancer cells have more genetic changes (DNA mutations) than normal cells. Some mutations are in somatic cells (sporadic cancers) or in the germinal line of cells (hereditary cancers).

Gene control and cancer Oncogenes are genes that can potentially cause cancer. Tumor suppressor genes are also involved in controlling cell growth and division because they can protect a cell from one step of the path to cancer. DNA repair genes are involved in fixing damaged DNA.

Causal factors— duplication DNA mistakes What causes cancer? Environmental factors— mutagens. Chemical compounds, tobacco smoke, ultraviolet rays Hereditary factors Causal factors— duplication DNA mistakes

What causes cancer? The human body has a lot of control systems to protect against inflammation. Some inflammation can last several days, but if the inflammation is caused by cancer cells, it persists and changes from acute to chronic inflammation. Many chronic inflammatory diseases can increase a person’s cancer risk.

What causes cancer? Genetic testing looks for specific inherited changes in a person’s chromosomes, genes or proteins. The test also determines whether family members have inherited the same mutation as a family member who is known to carry a cancer-associated mutation. For example, specific inherited mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes increase the risk of female breast and ovarian cancers.

Can viruses cause cancer? Viruses are able to cause cancer. They have oncogenes in their viral genome. A virus must enter a living cell and hijack its DNA in the host cell. RNA viruses transcribe the double strand DNA with the reverse transcriptase from a single strand RNA template.

How can we prevent cancer? Many things in our genes, lifestyle and environment may increase our risk of getting cancer. A healthy lifestyle could help prevent cancer, including: no smoking doing sport reduce the use of alcohol eat more fruits and vegetables avoid HPV or hepatitis protect skin from sun

How do we diagnose cancer? Diagnosis determines the type and size of a cancer and find out if it has spread. After diagnosis, it is possible to suggest treatments.

The main treatments include: How is cancer treated? The main treatments include: Surgery— open surgery or minimally invasive surgery makes it possible to remove a tumor in part or in whole Radiation therapy— external and internal beams of iodine and cobalt serve to destroy the DNA in humoral cells Chemotherapy— it works by stopping or slowing the growth of cancer cells

Immunotherapy— helps the immune system fight cancer How is cancer treated? Hormone therapy— some hormones stimulate cell growth; this therapy interferes with the receptors of these hormones. Tamoxifen is used for treating breast cancer. Targeted therapy— aims at the changes in cancer cells. The Imatinib is used against a particular type of leukemia. Immunotherapy— helps the immune system fight cancer Stem cell transplant— is a procedure that restores blood-forming stem cells

Each therapy and drug must be tested prior to use. How is cancer treated? Each therapy and drug must be tested prior to use. In vitro tests are made of single cells in the laboratory, outside living organisms. After a long time the drugs can be promoted to in vivo tests, using a whole, living organism. All these procedures are called preclinical development, a stage of research that begins before clinical trials (testing in humans).

What happens if a cancer returns after treatment? Cancer stem cells are cancer cells that can regenerate very fast. Such cells are hypothesized to persist in tumors as a distinct population and cause relapse and metastasis by giving rise to new tumors. A theory proposed to explain the metastatic preference of cancer cells for specific organs is called the “seed and soil” theory: interaction between the cells (seed) and the tissues (soil) determines the formation of a secondary tumor.

What happens if a cancer returns after treatment? Precision medicine is an emerging medical model and approach to disease treatment and prevention that takes into account individual variability in genes, environment, and lifestyle for each person. In this model, diagnostic testing is often used to select appropriate therapies based on a patient’s genetic content and other molecular and cellular analyses.