MCB Cancer Original
MCB Cancer Original
MCB Cancer Original
MCB 720
Susan Evans
John Kopchick
ONCOGENES AND CANCER
MCB 720
1/07
• Statistics
• Introduction to cancer and oncogenes
• Compare tumor suppressors and
oncogenes
• Tumor progression
• Mechanisms of oncogenes
• Examples of mutations in oncogenes
Mortality for Leading Causes of Death, United States-2001
700
600
500
Rate per 100,000
400
1950
2001
300
200
100
0
Heart diseases Cerebrovascular Pneumonia/influenza Cance
Cancer
diseases
2004 Estimated US Cancer Causes
Male Female
Prostate 33% Breast 32%
Lung 13% Lung 12%
Colon 11% Colon 10%
Bladder 6% Uterus 6%
Melanoma 4% Ovary 4%
Non-Hodgkin 4% Non-Hodgkin 4%
Lymphoma Lymphoma
Kidney 3% Melanoma 4%
Oral cavity 3% Thyroid 3%
Leukemia 3% Pancreas 2%
Pancreas 2% Bladder 2%
All other 18% All other 20%
2004 Estimated US Cancer Deaths
Male Female
Lung 32% Lung 32%
Prostate 10% Breast 10%
Colon 10% Colon 10%
Pancreas 5% Ovary 5%
Leukemia 5% Pancreas 5%
Non-Hodgkin 4% Leukemia 4%
Lymphoma Non-Hodgkin 4%
Esophagus 4% Lymphoma
Liver 3% Uterus 3%
Bladder 3% Multiple myeloma 3%
Kidney 3% Brain 3%
All other 21% All other 21%
Comparison between men and women of different ethnicities
400
350
300
250
Rate per 100,000
Men
200
Women
150
100
50
0
White African American Asian American Indian Hispanic
Introduction to cancer
Cellular homeostasis
Proliferation Arrest
Survival Apoptosis
Undifferentiated Differentiated
(oncogenes) (tumor suppressors)
overactive inactive
CANCER
Definitions
• Oncogene – a gene that when mutated or
expressed at abnormally high levels
contributes to converting a normal cell into
a cancer cell
• Proto-oncogene – the “normal” cellular
progenitors of oncogenes that function to
promote the normal growth and division of
cells
Proto-oncogene to oncogene
• An alteration occurs in a normal cellular
gene (proto-oncogene) that makes the
protein hyper-functional (oncogene)
Normal genes
(regulate cell
growth)
1st mutation
(leads to
accelerated cell
division)
1st mutation
(susceptible carrier)
2nd mutation or
loss (leads to
cancer)
2 mutations are necessary for a role in cancer development.
Comparison of Proto-oncogenes
and tumor suppressors
myc
ras
Myc + ras
Mechanisms of collaboration
• Multiple mutated genes disrupt multiple
control points of anti-cancer mechanism
• Synergistic/complementary activities
Clonal selection!
Initiation
Progression
Isolate DNA
Result: A single human gene is
transfect responsible for transforming
capability
3T3 cells Transformed
cells sequence
Endocrine
Paracrine
Y
Autocrine
Y
Growth factor expression
• Controlled at the level of gene expression
– Autocrine
• Cell produces a growth factor to which it also
responds
• Sis – encodes a variant form of PDGF
– Astrocytomas
– Increases cell growth
– Paracrine
• VEGF
• Increases growth of endothelial cells
• Secreted by tumor
Receptor activation
Rearrangement
Constitutively active
Ras proteins
GTP
Ras GDP
P
GEF
GTPase
GDP
GAP
•Cycle is unidirectional
•GTP bound is active form Ras GTP
•Regulated by 2 classes of proteins
• + regulator Active state
• -regulator
Oncogenic mutations that
constitutively activate Ras
• Constitutive activation of GEFs (positive
regulator)
• Reduction of GAP activity (negative
regulator)
• Mutation of Ras gene
– Cannot hydrolyze GTP
mSos1
mSos2
Ras-GRF
P120 gap
Neurofibromin
Gap 1m
X
Constitutively
Mutant Ras active
Point mutation of PTK
Receptor
G protein Activated
G protein
ATP
cAMP
Inactive state
GDP
GTP hydrolysis
GDP
GTP
Stimulates the
Target proteins GDP
exchange of
GTP for GDP
Oncogenic mutations
• Locking subunit in an active state
• Pituitary tumors
– Gsp – encodes a mutated subunit that
blocks GTPase activity
– Constitutive production of cAMP
• Thyroid tumors
– Thyroid receptor mutated
– Constitutive production of cAMP
Therapeutic implications
• High doses of retinoic acid can induce
differentiation
• Block growth factor/receptor interaction
with antagonist
• Tyrosine kinase inhibitors
• Block protein interactions in signaling
cascade (SH2 domain)
• Block membrane localization of Ras with
farnesylation inhibitors
Mortality for Leading Causes of Death, United States - 1978
Number of deaths Percent of total
Cause of death
Heart disease 729510 37.8
Cancer 396992 20.6
Cerebrovascular disease 175629 9.1
Accidents 105561 5.5
Pneumonia and influenza 58319 3.0
Proliferation Arrest
Survival Apoptosis
Undifferentiated Differentiated
(oncogenes) (tumor suppressors)
CANCER
Disruption of homeostasis
Activation of oncogenes
Normal genes
(regulate cell
growth)
1st mutation
(leads to
accelerated cell
division)
1st mutation
(susceptible carrier)
2nd mutation or
loss (leads to
cancer)
2 mutations are necessary for a role in cancer development.
Comparison of Proto-oncogenes and tumor suppressors
• Cancer – malignant
– Invades surrounding tissue
– Has the ability to metastasize
Transport
Primary neoplasm neovascularization Invasion
Arrest in organ
extravasation Adherence
Angiogenesis
and
proliferation
Establishment of
microenvironment metastases
Angiogenesis
Definition: Process where tumor cells encourage the in-
growth of capillaries and vessels from adjacent normal
tissue
myc
ras
Myc + ras
Mechanisms of collaboration
• Multiple mutated genes disrupt multiple
control points of anti-cancer mechanism
• Synergistic/complementary activities
• Cell tries to apoptose but selects for more
aggressive cell with increased proliferative
abilities
Multistep tumorigenesis
• Initiation
– 1st mutation
– Increased proliferation of a single cell
• Progression
– Additional mutations
– Selection for more aggressive cells
Clonal selection!
Initiation
Progression
Isolate DNA
Result: A single human gene is
transfect responsible for transforming
capability
3T3 cells Transformed
cells sequence
Endocrine
Paracrine
Y
Autocrine
Y
Growth factor expression
• Controlled at the level of gene expression
– Autocrine
• Cell produces a growth factor to which it also
responds
• Sis – encodes a variant form of PDGF
– Astrocytomas
– Increases cell growth
– Paracrine
• VEGF
• Increases growth of endothelial cells
• Secreted by tumor
Receptor activation
Rearrangement
p27
cyclinD1/cdk4 cyclinE/cdk2
P
Rb-E2F1 Rb + E2F1
proliferation
Point mutation
Constitutively active
Ras proteins
GTP
Ras GDP
P
GEF
GTPase
GDP
GAP
•Cycle is unidirectional
•GTP bound is active form Ras GTP
•Regulated by 2 classes of proteins
• + regulator Active state
• -regulator
mSos1
mSos2
Ras-GRF
P120 gap
Neurofibromin
Gap 1m
X
Constitutively
Mutant Ras active
Oncogenic mutations that
constitutively activate Ras
• Constitutive activation of GEFs (positive
regulator)
• Reduction of GAP activity (negative
regulator)
• Mutation of Ras gene
– Cannot hydrolyze GTP
Point mutation of PTK
Receptor
G protein Activated
G protein
ATP
cAMP
Inactive state
GDP
GTP hydrolysis
GDP
GTP
Stimulates the
Target proteins GDP
exchange of
GTP for GDP
Oncogenic mutations
• Locking subunit in an active state
• Pituitary tumors
– Gsp – encodes a mutated subunit that
blocks GTPase activity
– Constitutive production of cAMP
• Thyroid tumors
– Thyroid receptor mutated
– Constitutive production of cAMP
Therapeutic implications
• High doses of retinoic acid can induce
differentiation
• Block growth factor/receptor interaction
with antagonist
• Tyrosine kinase inhibitors
• Block protein interactions in signaling
cascade (SH2 domain)
• Block membrane localization of Ras with
farnesylation inhibitors