BIOL 2081C Lecture Notes - Lecture 29: Wild Type, Signal Transduction, Zygosity

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19 Sep 2017
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Learning objectives: define tumor-suppressor genes, oncogenes, and proto-oncogenes and describe how mutations in each type of gene can lead to cancer. Include the following: the concept of gain versus loss of function mutations, examples of each type of gene and an explanation as to why these are involved in cancer: tumor-suppressor genes. Genes that normally negatively control cell proliferation or that activate the apoptotic pathway. Loss-of-function mutations contribute to cancer progression: oncogenes. They improperly enhance the expression of genes that promote cell proliferation or inhibit apoptosis. Derived from proto-oncogenes (when proto-oncogenes are mutated they can give rise to oncogenes **a single altered copy leads to unregulated growth: proto-oncogenes. Some provide signals that leads to cell division & others regulate programmed cell death. When mutated they become oncogenes: distinguish between promoter fusions and gene fusions in the origin of leukemia. **two types of translocation: promoter fusions & gene fusions: promoter fusions.

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