Summary: Nutrition And Cancer
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1 Week 1
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1.1 Introduction
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What major cancers worldwide new cases are there per year
- Lung
- Breast cancer
- Colorectal
- Prostate
18.1 million new patients per year in the world (2018) - Lung
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What are the cancer-related deaths? And which cancers
9.6 million in 2018- Lung
- Colorectum
- Stomach
- Liver
- Breast
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How many patients are alive that were diagnosed with cancer in the previous 5 year? And which cancers?
43.8 million people- Breast
- Colorectum
- Prostate
- Lung
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How does the environment plays a role in cancer development?
- Smoking
- Radiation
- Chemicals
- Viruses
- Sunbathing
- Hormones
- Smoking
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1.2 Hallmarks of cancer
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Accumulation of (epi)genetic changesPicture
Thus…- Tumorigenesis is a multi-step process
- Multiple (epi)genetic alterations are required
- Development over many years
- Cancer cells less responsive to regulatory circuits of cellular proliferation and cell death
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What is part of the cell cycle?
Proliferation
Differentiation
Replication -
What is chronic proliferation: growth factors?
- A growth factor can bind to a growth factor receptor on the membrane
- After binding different processes can take place
- Phosphorylation, a phosphate group is added to the receptor, which lead to a change in the structure of the receptor
- This can lead to a signal to the nucleus, which can lead to proliferation
- A growth factor can bind to a growth factor receptor on the membrane
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What is the epidermal growth factor (receptor)
- There is a mutation in the
receptor - Which means that the
receptor is always active - And
proliferation is always stimulated
- There is a mutation in the
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What is the Retinoblastoma-associated (RB) protein?
There is no stopsignal and thecycle will go one and go on- Cdk1/cyclin B initiates mitosis
- Mitotic activators stimulate the synthesis of cyclin D
- Cyclins D and E and Cdk4 and Cdk2 phosphorylate RB, inactivating it
- Once R (restriction point) is passed, the cell cycle proceeds
- Cdk2/cyclin A stimulates dNA replication
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What is the tumour protein 53?
It is a damage sensor. In cancer cells the p53 is possibly inactivated, so cellular responses are ignored.
the p53 is receiving- DNA damage
- Activated oncogenes
- Hypoxia
- Ribonucleotide depletion
- Telomere erosion
the p53 is delivering- Apoptosis
- Cell-cycle arrest
- DNA repair
- Differentiation
- Senescence
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