BIOL 1F25 Lecture Notes - Lecture 13: Oncogene, P53, Apoptosis

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Mutation of only 1 or 2 proto-oncogene alleles to an oncogene allele (one that produces a protein that is active at the wrong time) is sufficient for that gene to contribute to cancer. Prior work showed that inactivation of the p53 gene was required for transformation of a normal cell into a cancerous cell. Oncogenes are abnormally activated during cancer development. The ras oncogene can transform normal cells into hyperplastic (rapidly dividing) cells. The mutant allele p53-wt inhibits (suppresses) the ras oncogene. The mutant alleles from cancerous cells, p53-val135 and p53-kh215, cannot inhibit the ras oncogene. Experimental approach: add the ras oncogene and a copy of the normal p53 gene (p53-wt), as well as a mutant allele of p53 to normal cells, and look for colonies of hyperplastic cells. The normal p53-wt allele is dominant to the mutant (p53-val135 and p53-kh215) allele. Genes such as p53 and rb are now called tumour suppressor genes .

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