Causes of Cancer
Characteristics of Cancer
Cell Division
Cancer Mutations
Cancer Treatment
100

What is cancer?

A group of diseases in which cells grow and divide uncontrollably due to mutations in genes that regulate the cell cycle.

100

What do we call a group of cancerous cells?

A tumor.

100

Why do we not want cell division to happen all the time?

Uncontrolled division can lead to tumors and cancer and disrupt normal tissue function.

100

Name 2 reasons why cells can form tumors.

Mutations in proto-oncogenes and/or tumor suppressor genes; failure of apoptosis; exposure to carcinogens (any two).

100

Why is the option of surgery limited?

It is only effective if the tumor is localized and has not spread (metastasized).


200

What do all types of cancer have in common?

All cancers involve uncontrolled cell division caused by genetic mutations.

200

What is apoptosis and why would it occur?

Apoptosis is programmed cell death; it occurs when a cell is damaged, infected, or no longer needed.

200

What keeps normal cells from dividing frequently?

Cell cycle checkpoints, regulatory proteins (like cyclins), and signals from the environment.

200

What is a carcinogen? Give one example.

A carcinogen is a substance or exposure that can cause cancer (e.g., UV radiation, tobacco smoke).

200

What is chemotherapy?

A treatment that uses drugs to kill rapidly dividing cells.


300

Explain how cancer-causing mutations to genes are like the accelerators and brakes of a car.

Some genes act like accelerators (promote cell division), while other genes act like brakes (slow/stop division). Cancer occurs when accelerators are stuck “on” and/or brakes fail.


300

What is contact inhibition and how does it differ in normal cells vs. cancer cells?

Contact inhibition is when cells stop dividing once they touch neighboring cells. Normal cells exhibit this; cancer cells ignore it and continue dividing.

300

What occurs at the first cell cycle checkpoint?

(G1 checkpoint) The cell checks for size, nutrients, and DNA damage before DNA replication.

300

What is the difference between passenger and driver mutations?

Driver mutations contribute to cancer progression; passenger mutations do not affect cancer growth.

300

How does chemotherapy work?

It targets and disrupts the cell division process, especially in fast-dividing cells like cancer cells.

400

What are the genes called whose normal function is to stop cell division?

Tumor suppressor genes.

400

Explain how telomerase affects cancer cells.

Telomerase maintains telomere length, allowing cancer cells to divide indefinitely instead of aging and dying.

400

What occurs at the second cell cycle checkpoint?

(G2 checkpoint) The cell checks that DNA has been properly replicated and is undamaged.

400

What is angiogenesis and how does it affect cancer cells?

Angiogenesis is the formation of new blood vessels; tumors use it to obtain oxygen and nutrients, allowing them to grow.

400

What is the main concern with using chemotherapy as a cancer treatment?

It also harms healthy fast-dividing cells (e.g., hair, digestive lining), causing side effects.

500

What are the genes called whose normal function is to promote cell division?

Proto-oncogenes.

500

Why does risk of cancer increase significantly with age?

Because mutations accumulate over time, increasing the likelihood of multiple mutations needed for cancer.

500

What occurs at the third cell cycle checkpoint?

(M checkpoint) The cell ensures chromosomes are properly attached to spindle fibers before separation.

500

How many alleles are required to be mutated to cause cancer in proto-oncogenes vs. tumor suppressor genes?

Proto-oncogenes: 1 mutated allele
Tumor suppressor genes: 2 mutated alleles

500

What is the spread of cancer cells from the original tumor to other parts of the body called?

Metastasis