Mer Scott
Quiz by , created more than 1 year ago

PHCY320 (Oncology) Quiz on ON2 Cancer pathogenesis, created by Mer Scott on 05/10/2019.

4
0
0
Mer Scott
Created by Mer Scott almost 5 years ago
Close

ON2 Cancer pathogenesis

Question 1 of 11

1

Oncogenesis is the mechanism by which a tumor arises, involving DNA . If the DNA is not repaired, the cell will
continue to and 'fix' the mutation in place. Successive mutations can build up until the cell division is no longer regulated.

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    mutation
    divide

Explanation

Question 2 of 11

1

Oncogenesis:
• 1 mutation is not enough, need mutations
• Number of mutations varies – impacts on
• These should generally be picked up at the points, and the DNA repaired, unless the checkpoint itself is mutated (‘’ mutation)…

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    multiple
    immunogenicity & prognosis
    check
    driver

Explanation

Question 3 of 11

1

Which of these is not an origin of mutations?

Select one of the following:

  • DNA replication

  • Inherited

  • Environmental insult

  • Infectious agents

  • GMOs

Explanation

Question 4 of 11

1

DNA replication
• normal DNA replication introduces 1 mutation /10^7 nucleotides
• most mutations still cause cancer, however there are some gene families in which a mutation can lead to oncogenesis:
- tumor suppressor genes( in cancer): factors & growth regulators, repair & genes, contact inhibition genes
- activator genes (oncogenes & proto-oncogenes, in cancer): angiogenic genes – eg growth factor (VEGF), genes which allow metastasis and escape from surveillance

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    won’t
    key
    inactive
    apoptosis
    growth
    active
    vascular endothelial
    immune

Explanation

Question 5 of 11

1

Inherited mutations
• some forms of cancer have a higher occurrence in some families
• they have inherited either:
- defective genes
- activated

BRCA is a tumor gene involved in repairing DNA . BRCA1/2 mutation results is a 56–84% lifetime risk of developing cancer and an 36–63% risk for cancer.

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    tumor suppressor
    oncogenes
    suppressor
    damage
    breast
    ovarian

Explanation

Question 6 of 11

1

Environmental Insult:
• Chemical = carcinogens. Either damage DNA or their damage DNA. Types of damage are strand , gene , nucleotide deletions & substitutions. Most common chemically induced cancer - lung cancer (% of all cancer deaths).
• Physical = radiation – variable toxicity.
Non-ionizing:
• UV, microwaves.
• UV causes
Ionizing:
• X-rays, g-rays, atomic bombs, nuclear reactors
tumor development (thyroid, breast, bone marrow)

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    directly
    metabolites
    breakage
    truncation
    30
    melanoma
    Spontaneous

Explanation

Question 7 of 11

1

Human Papillomavirus Viruses (HPV) is an infectious agent that can cause cancer. HPV is isolated from > 90% of tumors. HPV also causes carcinoma. High risk’ cancer-causing types:
- HPV- (55% of tumors)
- HPV-18 (15%)
- HPV-45 (10%)

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    cervical
    anogenital and oropharnygeal
    16

Explanation

Question 8 of 11

1

The immune system has pro-tumor effects - chronic inflammation has been associated with oncogenesis, and anti-tumor effects - immune system can kill cancer cells.

Select one of the following:

  • True
  • False

Explanation

Question 9 of 11

1

CD8 T cells must be activated by a professional (APC) to kill cancerous cells. The problem is we need to get activation of the APC, but there is no infection. Hopefully there is enough and/or cell to activate the APC.
The immune response should kill tumours but tumors are tissues. CD8 T cells are not allowed to destroy cells expressing self . The solution is an immune response directed against: antigens (new proteins in genetically unstable cells), viral proteins, or antigens.

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    antigen presenting cell
    necrosis
    stress
    cytotoxic
    self
    antigens
    mutated
    inappropriately expressed

Explanation

Question 10 of 11

1

Which of these is NOT an immune evasion strategy used by tumours?

Select one of the following:

  • not make any tumor antigens

  • shut down antigen presentation

  • shut down MHC class I expression

  • shut down expression of co-stimulator or adhesion molecules

  • not make immune cells

Explanation

Question 11 of 11

1

Tumor is immunosuppressive.
• Tumour expresses molecules eg Fas L
• Tumour secretes anti-inflammatory or suppressive molecules eg TGFb,

Drag and drop to complete the text.

    T cell apoptosis
    IL-10, PGE-2

Explanation