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Indicate whether each of the following descriptions better applies to proto-oncogenes (P) or tumor suppressor genes (T). Your answer would be a four-letter string composed of letters P and T only, e.g. PPPT. ( ) Cancer mutations in these genes are usually recessive. ( ) Cancer mutations in these genes include gene duplications. ( ) Cancer mutations in these genes are responsible for most hereditary cancers. ( ) Cancer mutations in these genes are commonly in the form of nonsense (truncating) mutations that abort protein synthesis.

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Truncating mutations in tumor suppress...

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The requirement for accumulation of multiple mutations in cancer progression is manifested in the normalized percentage of new cases of cancer diagnosed in different age groups. Which of the curves A to E in the following graph better represents the incidence of human cancers as a function of age? The requirement for accumulation of multiple mutations in cancer progression is manifested in the normalized percentage of new cases of cancer diagnosed in different age groups. Which of the curves A to E in the following graph better represents the incidence of human cancers as a function of age?

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The incidence of cancers grow...

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Among the following cancers, one is currently leading to the most number of deaths in the United States and in the rest of the world. In the United States, it contributes to cancer mortality more than the next three killing cancers combined. Worldwide, it claims more than 1.5 million lives every year. Which cancer is this?


A) Lung cancer
B) Breast cancer
C) Colon cancer
D) Pancreatic cancer
E) Stomach cancer

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The Ames test is used to test the mutagenicity of a compound suspected to be a carcinogen. In a simple form of the test, the carcinogen is first mixed with a rat liver extract. A disc of filter paper is soaked with this mixture and placed on a culture of a strain of Salmonella typhimurium that is defective in a gene involved in the synthesis of histidine, an amino acid that is essential for cell growth and proliferation. The strain is thus normally unable to grow into visible colonies when the histidine in the culture medium is depleted. In the presence of a mutagen, however, mutations (often "reverse mutations" in the same gene) can enable the bacteria to produce histidine on their own, and therefore grow into colonies. The results of the Ames test for three compounds A, B, and C-each used at the same concentration-are shown in the schematic diagram below. Colonies are indicated with black dots, and the disc is indicated with a white circle at the center of each plate. Which compound (A to C) appears to be a stronger mutagen in this assay? Write down A, B, or C as your answer.


A) The Ames test is used to test the mutagenicity of a compound suspected to be a carcinogen. In a simple form of the test, the carcinogen is first mixed with a rat liver extract. A disc of filter paper is soaked with this mixture and placed on a culture of a strain of Salmonella typhimurium that is defective in a gene involved in the synthesis of histidine, an amino acid that is essential for cell growth and proliferation. The strain is thus normally unable to grow into visible colonies when the histidine in the culture medium is depleted. In the presence of a mutagen, however, mutations (often  reverse mutations  in the same gene)  can enable the bacteria to produce histidine on their own, and therefore grow into colonies. The results of the Ames test for three compounds A, B, and C-each used at the same concentration-are shown in the schematic diagram below. Colonies are indicated with black dots, and the disc is indicated with a white circle at the center of each plate. Which compound (A to C)  appears to be a stronger mutagen in this assay? Write down A, B, or C as your answer.  A)    B)    C)
B) The Ames test is used to test the mutagenicity of a compound suspected to be a carcinogen. In a simple form of the test, the carcinogen is first mixed with a rat liver extract. A disc of filter paper is soaked with this mixture and placed on a culture of a strain of Salmonella typhimurium that is defective in a gene involved in the synthesis of histidine, an amino acid that is essential for cell growth and proliferation. The strain is thus normally unable to grow into visible colonies when the histidine in the culture medium is depleted. In the presence of a mutagen, however, mutations (often  reverse mutations  in the same gene)  can enable the bacteria to produce histidine on their own, and therefore grow into colonies. The results of the Ames test for three compounds A, B, and C-each used at the same concentration-are shown in the schematic diagram below. Colonies are indicated with black dots, and the disc is indicated with a white circle at the center of each plate. Which compound (A to C)  appears to be a stronger mutagen in this assay? Write down A, B, or C as your answer.  A)    B)    C)
C) The Ames test is used to test the mutagenicity of a compound suspected to be a carcinogen. In a simple form of the test, the carcinogen is first mixed with a rat liver extract. A disc of filter paper is soaked with this mixture and placed on a culture of a strain of Salmonella typhimurium that is defective in a gene involved in the synthesis of histidine, an amino acid that is essential for cell growth and proliferation. The strain is thus normally unable to grow into visible colonies when the histidine in the culture medium is depleted. In the presence of a mutagen, however, mutations (often  reverse mutations  in the same gene)  can enable the bacteria to produce histidine on their own, and therefore grow into colonies. The results of the Ames test for three compounds A, B, and C-each used at the same concentration-are shown in the schematic diagram below. Colonies are indicated with black dots, and the disc is indicated with a white circle at the center of each plate. Which compound (A to C)  appears to be a stronger mutagen in this assay? Write down A, B, or C as your answer.  A)    B)    C)

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Indicate true (T) and false (F) statements below regarding cancer incidence and cancer prevention. Your answer would be a four-letter string composed of letters T and F only, e.g. TFFF. ( ) Over half of all cancers are preventable by lifestyle changes. ( ) The age-adjusted cancer death rates have increased steadily since 1900, mostly due to the industrial way of life. ( ) Currently, more than half of all cancer patients survive at least five years post-diagnosis. ( ) About half of all cancers are thought to arise by infection with viruses, bacteria, or parasites.

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Except for the increase in cancers cau...

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Consider a healthy adult animal in which 10¹⁵ cell divisions have taken place since birth. Spontaneous mutations can occur at a rate of approximately one nucleotide out of about ten billion nucleotides every time DNA is replicated. The animal has a diploid genome size of about 2 billion nucleotide pairs. Assuming that only about 5% of mutations occur within genes or gene regulatory sequences, and further assuming that about 0.1% of those may cause cancer, how many potential cancer-causing mutations has the animal been able to successfully suppress (i.e. has been able to survive) during its lifetime?


A) Ten thousand
B) One hundred thousand
C) Ten million
D) One billion
E) Ten billion

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PARP inhibitors can efficiently kill many breast cancer cells that lack functional Brca1 or Brca2 genes. How do these drugs accomplish this?


A) By increasing the ability of p53 in cancer cells to limit cell proliferation
B) By inhibiting proteins that are normally inhibited by the Brca1 or Brca2 gene products
C) By increasing the occurrences of homologous recombination
D) By inhibiting a DNA repair pathway
E) By increasing the ability of the cancer cells to repair the mutations in their cancer-critical genes

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Which of the following can lead to p53 stabilization and activation?


A) Hypoxia
B) Overexpression of Myc
C) DNA damage
D) Telomere loss
E) All of the above

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Mutation in which of the following genes is most prevalent in human colorectal cancer cells?


A) K-Ras
B) β-Catenin
C) Apc
D) p53
E) MLH

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From an immortalized human HeLa cell line with wild-type p53 genes, you have derived a line that lacks both copies of the gene. You then treat the original and derived cells with the anticancer drug doxorubicin, which can activate the p53 pathway in the cell by stalling DNA replication forks and inducing double-strand breaks in DNA. You measure cell proliferation in the presence of different doses of the drug in each of the two cell lines, and plot the results as shown in the graph below. Which cell line (A or B) do you expect to be the original HeLa line? Write down A or B as your answer. From an immortalized human HeLa cell line with wild-type p53 genes, you have derived a line that lacks both copies of the gene. You then treat the original and derived cells with the anticancer drug doxorubicin, which can activate the p53 pathway in the cell by stalling DNA replication forks and inducing double-strand breaks in DNA. You measure cell proliferation in the presence of different doses of the drug in each of the two cell lines, and plot the results as shown in the graph below. Which cell line (A or B) do you expect to be the original HeLa line? Write down A or B as your answer.

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Cells in the original HeLa li...

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