Tumor Biology, Syndromes, and Genetic Mutations


Self-Sufficiency in Growth Signals

Mitogens are chemicals that trigger cell mitosis. In contrast with healthy cells, cancer cells have a reduced dependence on mitogens and external growth factors for replication.

Growth Factors

  • 1.

    Tumor cells and stroma produce factors that may influence tumor growth and stimulate cell environment.

  • 2.

    Transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) affects angiogenesis, extracellular matrix, and production of cytokines.

Alteration of Growth Signaling Pathways

  • 1.

    Growth factor receptors may be overexpressed or structurally altered.

  • 2.

    Overexpression may allow cells to be stimulated by very low levels of growth factors.

  • 3.

    Amplification of human epidermal growth factor receptor 2/neu (HER2/neu) is found in some forms of aggressive breast cancer.

Sos/Ras/Raf/Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Pathway

  • 1.

    This is altered in approximately 25% of human cancers.

  • 2.

    K-ras mutations are found in lung, pancreatic, and colon cancers.

  • 3.

    The Ras oncogene encodes mutant protein that continuously releases mitogenic signals.

Tumor Growth is Dependent on Many Factors

  • 1.

    Angiogenesis factors, growth factors, chemokines, cytokines, hormones, enzymes, and cytolytic/cytostatic factors

Insensitivity to Growth-Inhibitory Signals

Retinoblastoma Protein

  • 1.

    Retinoblastoma protein (pRB) has a central role in progression of cell through the G1 phase of the cell cycle.

  • 2.

    Action may be lost through deletion or inactivation.

  • 3.

    Evidence suggests that alterations leading to the loss of growth suppression by pRB exist in the majority of human cancers.

Evasion of Programmed Cell Death

p53 Tumor-Suppressor Protein

  • 1.

    In healthy cells, it is responsible for temporary arrest of cell growth in response to damage to allow for repair or elimination by apoptosis.

  • 2.

    Action may be lost via a diverse array of mechanisms.

  • 3.

    Alterations in the p53 pathway exist in the majority of human cancers.

Extrinsic Apoptosis Induction

  • 1.

    Many tumor cells upregulate programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1), which binds to programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) on T cells, thereby inactivating immune-mediated killing and permitting tumor escape.

Limitless Replicative Potential

  • 1.

    Normal cells carry an intrinsic program that limits their ability to replicate.

    • a.

      Independent of cell-to-cell signaling pathways

    • b.

      Senescence reached once cells have divided a specified number of times

  • 2.

    Loss of tumor suppressor proteins (p53 and pRB) leads to a crisis state.

    • a.

      Massive cell death

    • b.

      Karyotypic disarray

    • c

      One in 10 7 cells achieves the ability to divide ad infinitum, termed immortalization.

  • 3.

    Most tumor cells propagated in culture are immortalized.

  • 4.

    Telomere maintenance is vital to continued replication of tumor cells.

    • a.

      Ongoing maintenance of protective telomere sequences on the ends of chromosomes allows for immortality of cells.

    • b.

      Reactivation of telomerase (suppressed in normal human cell types) and a telomerase-independent mechanism (“alternative lengthening of telomeres”) allow for indefinite proliferation of cells.

Sustained Angiogenesis

  • 1.

    Tumors cannot exceed diameters of 2 mm without acquiring a blood supply.

  • 2.

    Solid tumors secrete proangiogenic factors.

    • a.

      Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)

    • b.

      Basic and acidic fibroblast growth factor

    • c.

      Platelet-derived growth factor

    • d.

      anti-VEGF (Avastin)—angiogenesis inhibitor first approved for treatment of colon cancer

  • 3.

    Tumors may also downregulate antiangiogenic proteins.

    • a.

      Thrombospondin-1, which binds to CD36

    • b.

      Interferon-β

Tissue Invasion and Metastasis

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