Genetics - Chapter 12
About ______ of all cancers are the result of viral infections making certain viruses a major cause of cancer.
15%
The cell cycle is regulated by _____ main checkpoints.
3
An individual must have a genetic predisposition for cancer in order for it to develop.
False
Chromosomal aberrations, such as aneuploidy and translocations, are rarely observed in cancer cells.
False
Most individuals who are heterozygous for cancer-related alleles will develop cancer at a young age.
False
Mutant BRCA1 and BRCA2 alleles are associated with lower rates of breast and ovarian cancer.
False
The only risk factor for cancer is the transmission of mutant alleles from parent to offspring.
False
The purpose of cell cycle checkpoints is to ensure that cells divide continuously.
False
Traditional cancer therapies target only the cancerous cells; therefore, patients rarely experience side effects of the treatment.
False
Tumor suppressor genes function to promote cell division, while proto-oncogenes function to halt cell division.
False
Unrepaired DNA breaks decrease the rate of cancer causing mutations in genes located at or near break points.
False
Women carrying a mutant BRCA1 or BRCA2 allele do not have an increased risk of developing ovarian cancer.
False
Women who did not inherit a mutation that predisposes them to breast cancer should consider breast removal surgery.
False
Cancer causing mutations are always the result of chromosomal rearrangements.
False
There are no direct-to-consumer genetic tests available that screen for breast cancer susceptibility.
False
Whether cells will enter the S phase or will be sent to the G0 (G-zero) non-dividing state is determined by the
G1/S checkpoint
In rapidly dividing cells, expression of BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes is the highest during the ____.
G1/S transition and into S phase
The ________ cell cycle checkpoint ensures that DNA replication has occurred accurately.
G2/M
This checkpoint makes sure that the DNA has been replicated and that any damage to the DNA has been repaired.
G2/M checkpoint
Gardasil and Cervaix are vaccines that were developed to prevent infection by:
Human papilloma viruses
________ occur(s) when cancer cells migrate away from the primary tumor and form new malignant tumors in other parts of the body.
Metastasis
A tumor arises from the continued cell division of a single cancerous cell.
True
About 40% of human cancers are characterized by mutations in the ras proto-oncogene, which results in uncontrolled cell division.
True
All cancers are caused by mutations.
True
Both BRCA1 and BRCA2 are DNA repair genes.
True
Colon cancer has fewer cellular adhesion and motility mutations but more transport mutations than breast cancer.
True
Epigenetic changes, including abnormal DNA methylation patterns and imprinting, are observed in many cancers.
True
Genetic mutations exist in almost all cancers; however, not all cancers are inherited.
True
Herceptin, a drug for treating breast cancer, competes for the HER2 receptors on the surface of breast cancer cells, blocking them from receiving growth signals and passing them to the cell's nucleus.
True
Men who inherit the mutant BRCA1 or BRCA2 allele are also at risk of developing breast cancer.
True
New research is focusing on developing drugs to stop the growth of cancer cells rather than trying to kill them.
True
Research has shown that viral genes can promote and sustain the growth of cancer in infected cells.
True
Several mutations are required for the development of colon cancer.
True
Since Gleevec binds to the same site as the ATP molecule, ATP cannot provide the signal protein needed to continue cell division; therefore, cancer cells stop dividing and die.
True
Some cancers have high rates of mutation, but most have low rates of mutation.
True
The goal of The Cancer Genome Atlas project is to catalog and understand the DNA mutations found in all cancers.
True
About one in three people will be diagnosed with cancer at some time in his/her life.
True
Most of the somatic cells in the body are structurally and functionally specialized and do not divide.
True
The mutant BRCA1 gene imparts a dominantly inherited predisposition to breast cancer.
True
retinoblastoma
a malignant tumor of eye most prevalent in children
Cancer always begins in:
a single cell
In most cases, cancer-causing mutations ____.
accumulate over a number of years
There will always be a baseline rate of cancer because ________.
all cancers are ultimately caused by mutations
Exposure to ________ increases the risk for developing lung cancer, which causes 30% of all cancer deaths in the US.
all tobacco products
The field of epigenetics has opened the way for the development of a new class of anticancer drugs ____.
because of the discovery that epigenetic modification of key genes is important in some cancers and the fact that epigenetic changes are reversible
A cell can grow uncontrollably and cause a tumor that is not cancerous, but instead is:
benign
Cancer-causing mutations of the cell cycle ____.
cause the cell to bypass checkpoints in the cycle
The familial adenomatous polyposis trait for colon cancer is associated with:
chromosomal instability
When six or more mutations in the FAP gene occur in a specific sequence in a certain cell, the result is ________.
colon cancer
The hereditary nonpolyposis trait for colon cancer is associated with:
failures in DNA repair
proto-oncogenes
genes that encode proteins that help regulate the cell cycle by starting and continuing cell division
tumor-suppressor genes
genes that encode proteins that help regulate the cell cycle by turning off or decreasing the rate of cell division
oncogenes
genes that initiate or maintain uncontrolled cell growth
Stem cells ____.
have the property of self-renewal by division
All cancers have ________.
higher rates of mutation than normal cells
Aberrant DNA methylation can lead to cancer because ________.
hypermethylation can inactivate DNA repair genes
Mutant BRCA1 and BRCA2 alleles ________.
increase the risk of breast and ovarian cancer
During mitosis the attachment of spindle fibers to chromosomes is monitored to enable the anaphase separation of chromosomes. This occurs during
late metaphase
When an individual is heterozygous for a cancer-related allele, s/he may develop cancer after mutation of the other, normal allele, a concept known as ________.
loss of heterozygosity
The five-year survival rate of ______ cancer is only 13%.
lung
Cells that acquire the ability to divide uncontrollably, and which can break away and move to other locations in the body, are:
malignant
If genetic testing reveals the presence of a breast cancer allele in Anna's mother, but not her maternal aunts, then Anna ________.
may have inherited this allele from her mother
One of the properties of cancer is its ability to spread, or ________, to other sites in the body.
metastasize
When cells detach from a tumor and move to other locations in the body they are said to have:
metastasized
Abnormal epigenetic patterns of DNA ______ are associated with many types of cancer, and the removal of _______ groups can activate genes involved with cell growth and can increase genomic instability.
methylation; methyl
When MSH2 and MLH1 are inactivated by mutation, DNA repair is defective and _______ mutation rates increase by at least 100-fold.
microsatellite
By sequencing the genomes of cancer cells, researchers learned that cancer cells contain ________.
more mutations than previously thought
Mutations in DNA repair genes do not in themselves cause cancer, but they do increase the ______ across the genome.
mutation rate
Most cancers are age related since cells only become cancerous after accumulating a specific a number of
mutations
Drug therapies that target only cancer cells rather than all dividing cells in the body stop the growth of cancer by blocking the action of ________ proteins on the growth and division of malignant cells.
oncogene
Formation of _______ is an intermediate stage in the development of colon cancer.
polyps
At each checkpoint a combination of external signals and internal ______ determines whether the cell will move on to the next stage of the cell cycle.
regulatory pathways
The ras proto-oncogene family encodes proteins that function in ________, relaying signals from outside the cell across the cell membrane.
signal transduction
A cellular molecular pathway by which an external signal is converted into a functional response is called ______
signal transduction
For colon/rectal cells to become cancerous, ______ mutations must occur in the cells.
six or more
According to the American Cancer Society, 30% of all cancer deaths in the U.S. are due to ____.
smoking
Cancer therapies such as Gleevec and Herceptin may be preferable to traditional therapies that use radiation and chemicals because these new therapies ________.
target only cancer cells
The specific translocation forming the Philadelphia chromosome leads to chronic myelogenous leukemia because ________, resulting in continuous cell division.
the BCR gene sequences "switch on" the ABL1 sequences
A characteristic of all cancers is that ____.
the cells divide continuously
A(n) _______ between chromosome 9 and chromosome 22 in chronic myelogenous leukemia results in a Philadelphia chromosome.
traslocation
The protein product of the p53 gene functions at the G1/S cell cycle checkpoint, pausing the cell cycle if DNA damage occurs; therefore, p53 is a(n) ________.
tumor suppressor gene
Genes that turn off or decrease the rate of cell division are known as _______ genes.
tumor-suppressor
The rise in skin cancer is mainly due to the exposure to ________ in tanning salons.
ultraviolet light
About ____ of all cancer cases have a hereditary component.
5% to 10%
The translocation seen in the Philadelphia chromosome in myelogenous leukemia represents ____.
a specific chromosomal aberration accompanying a specific cancer
Hereditary nonpolyposis colon cancers (HNPCC) ____.
are caused by several mutations in several different genes
The RB1 tumor-suppressor gene ____.
controls the G1/S checkpoint
If a cell begins to divide in an uncontrolled way, it ____.
may form a benign tumor
During the M checkpoint, the cell ____.
monitors attachment of spindle fibers to chromosomes
During metabolism, cancer-causing ____ are generated.
reactive oxygen species (ROS)
A proto-oncogene ____.
regulates cell division
Many specialized cells, such as white blood cells, ____.
remain in G0 until stimulated by external signals to reenter the cell cycle and divide