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Hereditary retinoblastoma is an autosomal dominant hereditary cancer.Cells from retinal tumors in a child who has this disease possess


A) evidence of non-disjunction in all autosomes.
B) one non-functional copy of the retinoblastoma gene.
C) two non-functional copies of the retinoblastoma gene.
D) trisomy for the retinblastoma gene.
E) a dominant mutation in the retinoblastoma gene.

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The nucleic acid of retroviral provirus is composed of RNA.

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Please select the best match for each term.

Premises
Proto-oncogenes
Cyclins
CDK
Oncogenes
Tumor suppressors
Responses
Normal growth-promoting genes
Are made and degraded at specific points in the cell cycle
Genes that produce abnormally active cell growth proteins
Phosphorylate proteins important to the cell cycle
Proteins that can stop the cell cycle

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Proto-oncogenes
Cyclins
CDK
Oncogenes
Tumor suppressors

Which of the following statements is not true?


A) Certain types of virus can cause cancer.
B) Melanomas are commonly caused by ionizing radiation.
C) Neoplasia is another term for cancerous cells.
D) About half the people with cancer have a mutation in a p53 gene.
E) Most cancers are hereditary.

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The products of tumor suppressor genes stimulate cell proliferation,while the products of proto-oncogenes inhibit cell proliferation.

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Wild-type mutator genes produce substances that induce point mutations and chromosomal rearrangements.

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Ionizing radiation is emitted at low levels by many natural objects,including some rocks and gases.

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What is metastasis,and why is metastatic cancer the most difficult cancer to treat?

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Metastasis is the spreading of cancerous...

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Cancer is best defined as


A) immune dysfunction.
B) uncontrolled and abnormal cell division.
C) viral malignancy.
D) regulated differentiation of tissue.
E) cellular deregulation.

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Protein kinases are enzymes that normally catalyze the


A) degradation of cellular proteins.
B) phosphorylation of cellular proteins.
C) formation of peptide bonds in proteins.
D) phosphorylation of ADP.
E) synthesis of kinins.

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The Bcl-2 gene product in its normal form can be activated to prevent cells from undergoing apoptosis (programmed cell death)in specific circumstances.It is a carefully regulated gene,being "turned on" only under specific circumstances.A null mutation in Bcl-2 leads to excessive cell loss.Some Bcl-2 mutation can cause a "gain of function" in which the protein is active all the time. a.In the terms used in this chapter,what would the normal version be called? b.What would the gain-of-function mutation be called? c.How would you expect the gain-of-function mutation to be involved in cancer?

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(a)A proto-oncogene. (b)An oncogene. (c)The gain-of-function mutation could cause abnormal cells to fail to commit suicide when their genome has been irreparably damaged.As a result,these cells could mutate into cancer cells.

Apoptosis is


A) rapid cell division.
B) caused by proto-oncogenes.
C) the change in shape of a cell when it becomes cancerous.
D) programmed cell death.
E) None of these

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D

What kinds of cancers might eventually be treated with RNAi,which you learned about in

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siRNAs can be engineered to silence or d...

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In normal cells,p53 protein acts as


A) a signal transducer.
B) a tumor suppressor.
C) a proto-oncogene activator.
D) a GTPase inhibitor.
E) None of these

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At the molecular level,what exactly are the mutagenic effects of UVA and UVB radiation?

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Agents that can induce cancer through mutagenesis are called


A) destabilizers.
B) cancerogens.
C) mutagens.
D) carcinogens.
E) None of these

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Mutations in a normal growth-stimulating gene are most likely to have no effect or to cause


A) the loss of responsiveness to growth stimulation in the cell with the mutant gene.
B) the cell with the mutant gene to become cancerous.
C) excessive growth in the cells surrounding the one with the mutant gene.
D) a mutator effect in the cell with the mutant gene.
E) apoptosis of the cell with the mutant gene.

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Terminally differentiated cells are noncancerous,normal cells.

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Cell proliferation in culture is normally limited by


A) cytophagy.
B) quorum sensing.
C) contact inhibition.
D) competition.
E) nutrient limitation.

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C

Some carcinogens act on the genome directly,while others are converted to mutagenic substances by the cells's enzymes.

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