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100

Biologically, what is the definition of cancer?

Cell/cluster of cells that lose the ability to control mitosis impending bodily functions

100

What does it mean that cancer metastasis?

Migration of cancer cells from place of origin to other places 

100

Define benign tumor

Cluster of cells which have undergone a oncogene activation, but are not yet cancerous

100

Define malignant tumor

Cluster of cells which have undergone multiple oncogene activations and are cancerous 

100

Define an oncogene.

A cancer - causing gene

200

Define a proto - oncogene 

  1. Normal genes that have the potential to become an oncogene IF MUTATED
    a. Normally involved in cell division                                                          b. Dozens are known











200

What are some main current cancer treatments?

Radiation, chemotherapy, and surgery

200

How many cell divisions occur in meiosis?

2, Meiosis I and Meiosis II

200

What is cytokinesis?

Process of dividing the cytoplasm following mitosis or meiosis.

200

What does the S in interphase stand for and what occurs during it? 

S stands for synthesis and DNA replication occurs during this phase.

300

What makes a cell lose control of mitosis?

Damage or change in genes responsible for mitosis.

300

Will one mitosis gene mutation likely cause cancer?

Probably not, it takes the mutations of many mitosis genes to lead to cancer

300

How were cancers previously categorized compared to now?

  1. Categorized by the tissue in which they developed and now categorized by the mutations that cause them
           a. Better because it allows for more directed treatment

300

How does cytokinesis occur in eukaryotes? 

Microtubules from a cleavage furrow which cleaves cytoplasm apart to form 2 different cells. 

300

Are cells produced via meiosis genetically identical?

No, each produced cell is genetically unique

400

How does a cell prevent cancerous cells?

Tumor Suppressor genes → inhibit excessive cell division 

400

Why are the elderly more likely to develop cancer?

The probability of mitosis gene mutations accumulating continuously increases

400

Why do sister chromatids stay attached until anaphase? 

Less errors 

400

Name the two ways meiosis promotes genetic diversity:

Crossing over, independent assortment

400

What is the most majour distinction between Meiosis I and Meiosis II?

Prophase one pulls homologous chromosomes apart which have bond to form tetrads

500

Define and provide three examples of a carcinogen? 

  • Carcinogen = agents of cancerous transformation

  • Smoking, HPV, UV light

500

How does HPV relate to cancer?

Causes change in p53 protein increasing probability of cancer developing



500

What does meiosis I do? 

Separate homologous pairs, thus separates different versions of the genes 

500

What does Meiosis II do?

Pulls apart sister chromatids, is more like mitosis 

500

How many cells does meiosis produce and what is their ploidy? 

  1. 4 and (n)

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