1 / 32

Cell Death and Cancer

Cell Death and Cancer . SNC2D. First a bit more cell division…. How do prokaryotes d ivide? Do all eukaryotes divide their cells using mitosis? Do all cells divide at the same speed? What factors affect mitosis? How do cells die?. 1. Binary Fission.

yorick
Télécharger la présentation

Cell Death and Cancer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cell Death and Cancer SNC2D

  2. First a bit more cell division… • How do prokaryotes divide? • Do all eukaryotes divide their cells using mitosis? • Do all cells divide at the same speed? • What factors affect mitosis? • How do cells die?

  3. 1. Binary Fission • Type of cell division used by prokaryotes (bacteria)

  4. 2. Budding • Asexual reproduction in which a new organism develops from an outgrowth or bud on another one

  5. 3. Regeneration • the process of restoration, and growth after damage

  6. 4. Fragmentation • A form of asexual reproduction where an organism is split into fragments and each fragment develops into mature, fully grown individuals which are clones of the original organism

  7. What other factors impact mitosis? • Altitude, antibiotics… • Can you think of any others? • Chemotherapy • Radiation • Sunlight

  8. How do Cells die? Necrosis • Death due to unexpected and accidental cell damage. • This is an unregulated cell death. • Causes: toxins, radiation, trauma, lack of oxygen due to the blockage of blood flow.

  9. How do Cells die? Apoptosis • A cell also dies as a normal part of the functioning of healthy multicellular organisms. • This is a regulated, or controlled, cell death of cells that are no longer useful. • Apoptosis also removes cells that have lost their ability to perform efficiently.

  10. Apoptosis • The material of the cell is recycled by the body.

  11. Comparison

  12. Apoptosis Videos • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7WRkY8q_F3k • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gYWUTBM8tTo

  13. Cell Lifespans • Cells do not live forever. They can only divide a certain number of times until they receive a message or instructions to die. Cell division is necessary for cells to be replaced after they die. • In your body, 3 billion cells die every minute. • We undergo cell division as part of regeneration, a process essential for repairing damaged tissue. • Why do we age? • Not entirely sure • as cells die, they are not replaced or just not as quickly. This results in changes to the structure and function of major body systems.

  14. What happens when damage to a cell impairs its ability to commit apoptosis and it divides and divides and divides? CANCER

  15. Cancer Cancer = uncontrolled cell division • Caused by changes in the genes controlling cell division • loss of a cell’s ability to undergo apoptosis (“immortal”) • On/off switch is broken • Continually reproducing = Tumour

  16. Cancer • In small groups • – Compare Normal Cells to Cancer Cells

  17. Review: The cell cycle has four phases and controls cell division

  18. Cell Cycle Checkpoints • There are three checkpoints in the cell cycle • G1-S transition • G2-M transition • Exit M phase transition • Checkpoints are where the cell assesses whether conditions are favorable for cell division. • When the environment is not favorable (for example, when the cell’s DNA is damaged), a protein called p53 can stop the cell cycle and cause the cell to die. • When the proteins that regulate the cell cycle are mutated or absent, cells can divide controllably, leading to cancer.

  19. Tumor suppressors and oncogenes • Mutations in oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes can lead to cancer • http://science.education.nih.gov/supplements/nih1/cancer/activities/activity2_animations.htm • (animation #5)

  20. Cell Cycle Checkpoints • A cell should remain in interphase and not divide if… • Signals from surrounding cells tell the cell not to divide • There are not enough nutrients in the cell • The DNA has not yet been replicated • The DNA is damaged • These checkpoints are regulated by special proteins like p53

  21. Microscopic Appearance of Cancer Cells

  22. Definitions • Tumour: • A mass of cells resulting from rapid cell growth

  23. Benign: • Tumours that stay confined in a small area, causing little damage • Malignant: • Dangerous tumours that break away and move to other areas of the body. • Metastasize • Spread of cancer

  24. Causes of Cancer • Mutation: • Random changes that can occur when DNA is replicated • Carcinogen: • Any environmental factor that can cause a mutation

  25. Videos on Cancer • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j_wRpa2b5XI • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8n0ijZpYXwo • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/body/how-cancer-grows.html

  26. ANDI – Inserted DNA Monkey with green glow protein from a jellyfish inserted into its DNA.

  27. TgCat1 - Green Glow Cats • These GM cats carry: • Green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene • and an extra monkey gene, called TRIMCyp, which protects rhesus macaques from infection by feline immunodeficiency virus or FIV – responsible for cat AIDS

  28. Glow in the dark dog with an on/off switch! • The switch is a chemical trigger • Give the dog an antibiotic along with food, she’ll start to glow under UV light • Tegon was cloned and in the process her genes were modified to instruct her cells to react to an antibiotic by glowing • This research will help find cures to diseases (like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's) that are common to both dogs and humans • Want one? • She costs $3 million.

  29. Curious Cloning… • Random  In 2008 an American couple paid more than $150,000 to have their late pet dog cloned

More Related