Deck 18: Cellular Growth Control and Cancer

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Question
Constitutive activation of the Ras protein is observed in many cancers.Which type of abnormality in the Ras protein is most likely to cause cancer?

A)Mutation of the site that is normally phosphorylated by the MAP kinases.
B)Mutation of the site that is normally phosphorylated by protein kinase A.
C)Inability to hydrolyze bound guanosine triphosphate (GTP).
D)Inability to bind GTP.
E)Inability to activate the protein kinase Raf.
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Question
The cell cycle is regulated by extracellular signals called mitogens.The cyclin that is most likely to be elevated directly in response to mitogen action is:

A)Cyclin A.
B)Cyclin B.
C)Cyclin H.
D)Cyclin D.
E)Cyclin E.
Question
A type of somatic mutation that inhibits apoptosis and thereby permits the survival of deviant cells is:

A)Loss of the gene for Akt (protein kinase B).
B)Amplification of the retinoblastoma gene.
C)Loss of the gene for PTEN, the lipid phosphatase that destroys phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-trisphosphate.
D)Loss of the gene for the p53-binding protein Mdm2.
E)Amplification of the gene for E2F.
Question
The function of caspases is:

A)Stimulation of cyclin-dependent protein kinases.
B)Inhibition of cyclin-dependent protein kinases.
C)Destruction of cellular proteins during apoptosis.
D)Prevention of apoptosis by the mitochondrial pathway.
E)Activation of death receptors on the cell surface.
Question
In most individuals with inherited colon cancer susceptibility who do not have excessive numbers of benign and premalignant polyps, the cancer susceptibility is caused by a heterozygous defect in a gene for:

A)Postreplication mismatch repair.
B)Genome-wide nucleotide excision repair.
C)The lipid phosphatase PTEN.
D)The antiapoptotic protein Bcl2.
E)The transcriptional regulator p53.
Question
Breast cancer is diagnosed in a 62-year-old woman.She already survived a soft-tissue sarcoma that had been diagnosed and successfully treated when she was 40 years old and an adrenocortical cancer that had been diagnosed and successfully treated when she was 48 years old.She probably has an inherited cancer susceptibility that affects:

A)p53.
B)BRCA1.
C)BRCA2.
D)Neurofibromin.
E)The retinoblastoma protein pRb.
Question
In order to push the cell through the G₁ checkpoint, the cyclin-dependent kinases have to phosphorylate:

A)The p53 protein.
B)The retinoblastoma protein pRb.
C)The MAP kinases.
D)The Ras protein.
E)The Bcl2 protein.
Question
Progression through the early stages of mitosis requires the phosphorylation of many nuclear proteins, including chromosomal scaffold proteins and the lamins.The cyclin that is most directly involved in these phosphorylations is:

A)Cyclin A.
B)Cyclin B.
C)Cyclin H.
D)Cyclin D.
E)Cyclin E.
Question
Cytochrome c is normally attached to the outer surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane, where it participates in electron transport.However, when released into the cytoplasm, it can influence the fate of the cell by:

A)Activating mitogen-activated protein kinases, thereby pushing the cell through the G1 checkpoint.
B)Binding to death receptors, thereby triggering apoptosis.
C)Entering the nucleus, where it activates transcription by removing the retinoblastoma protein pRb from the transcription factor E2F.
D)Binding tightly to the Ras protein, thereby causing exit from the cell cycle.
E)Helping in the assembly of the apoptosome, which triggers apoptosis.
Question
Cervical cancer is often described as a "sexually transmitted cancer" because infection with papillomavirus (wart virus) is a major risk factor.The strains of human papillomavirus that promote cervical cancer do so by:

A)Production of a protein that stimulates growth factor receptors on the cell surface.
B)Production of a protein that is closely related to the Ras protein.
C)Introduction of a viral oncogene with tyrosine-specific protein kinase activity.
D)Introduction of a viral oncogene that is closely related to the product of the human myc oncogene.
E)Production of viral proteins that bind tightly to the human p53 and pRb proteins.
Question
Akt (protein kinase B) is a protein kinase whose activation causes, among other effects:

A)Cell cycle arrest.
B)Progression through the G2 checkpoint.
C)Activation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases.
D)Activation of phosphoinositide 3-kinase.
E)Inhibition of apoptosis.
Question
Loss of heterozygosity in genomic locations close to the site of the mutation is observed in the malignant tumors of many patients with inherited cancer susceptibility.The most likely cause for loss of heterozygosity in these patients is:

A)A missense mutation in the intact copy of the affected tumor suppressor gene.
B)A nonsense mutation in the intact copy of the affected tumor suppressor gene.
C)A frameshift mutation in the intact copy of the tumor suppressor gene.
D)Amplification of the affected oncogene.
E)Mitotic crossing over of the affected chromosome.
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Deck 18: Cellular Growth Control and Cancer
1
Constitutive activation of the Ras protein is observed in many cancers.Which type of abnormality in the Ras protein is most likely to cause cancer?

A)Mutation of the site that is normally phosphorylated by the MAP kinases.
B)Mutation of the site that is normally phosphorylated by protein kinase A.
C)Inability to hydrolyze bound guanosine triphosphate (GTP).
D)Inability to bind GTP.
E)Inability to activate the protein kinase Raf.
Inability to hydrolyze bound guanosine triphosphate (GTP).
2
The cell cycle is regulated by extracellular signals called mitogens.The cyclin that is most likely to be elevated directly in response to mitogen action is:

A)Cyclin A.
B)Cyclin B.
C)Cyclin H.
D)Cyclin D.
E)Cyclin E.
Cyclin D.
3
A type of somatic mutation that inhibits apoptosis and thereby permits the survival of deviant cells is:

A)Loss of the gene for Akt (protein kinase B).
B)Amplification of the retinoblastoma gene.
C)Loss of the gene for PTEN, the lipid phosphatase that destroys phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-trisphosphate.
D)Loss of the gene for the p53-binding protein Mdm2.
E)Amplification of the gene for E2F.
Loss of the gene for PTEN, the lipid phosphatase that destroys phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-trisphosphate.
4
The function of caspases is:

A)Stimulation of cyclin-dependent protein kinases.
B)Inhibition of cyclin-dependent protein kinases.
C)Destruction of cellular proteins during apoptosis.
D)Prevention of apoptosis by the mitochondrial pathway.
E)Activation of death receptors on the cell surface.
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5
In most individuals with inherited colon cancer susceptibility who do not have excessive numbers of benign and premalignant polyps, the cancer susceptibility is caused by a heterozygous defect in a gene for:

A)Postreplication mismatch repair.
B)Genome-wide nucleotide excision repair.
C)The lipid phosphatase PTEN.
D)The antiapoptotic protein Bcl2.
E)The transcriptional regulator p53.
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6
Breast cancer is diagnosed in a 62-year-old woman.She already survived a soft-tissue sarcoma that had been diagnosed and successfully treated when she was 40 years old and an adrenocortical cancer that had been diagnosed and successfully treated when she was 48 years old.She probably has an inherited cancer susceptibility that affects:

A)p53.
B)BRCA1.
C)BRCA2.
D)Neurofibromin.
E)The retinoblastoma protein pRb.
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7
In order to push the cell through the G₁ checkpoint, the cyclin-dependent kinases have to phosphorylate:

A)The p53 protein.
B)The retinoblastoma protein pRb.
C)The MAP kinases.
D)The Ras protein.
E)The Bcl2 protein.
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Unlock for access to all 12 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
8
Progression through the early stages of mitosis requires the phosphorylation of many nuclear proteins, including chromosomal scaffold proteins and the lamins.The cyclin that is most directly involved in these phosphorylations is:

A)Cyclin A.
B)Cyclin B.
C)Cyclin H.
D)Cyclin D.
E)Cyclin E.
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9
Cytochrome c is normally attached to the outer surface of the inner mitochondrial membrane, where it participates in electron transport.However, when released into the cytoplasm, it can influence the fate of the cell by:

A)Activating mitogen-activated protein kinases, thereby pushing the cell through the G1 checkpoint.
B)Binding to death receptors, thereby triggering apoptosis.
C)Entering the nucleus, where it activates transcription by removing the retinoblastoma protein pRb from the transcription factor E2F.
D)Binding tightly to the Ras protein, thereby causing exit from the cell cycle.
E)Helping in the assembly of the apoptosome, which triggers apoptosis.
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10
Cervical cancer is often described as a "sexually transmitted cancer" because infection with papillomavirus (wart virus) is a major risk factor.The strains of human papillomavirus that promote cervical cancer do so by:

A)Production of a protein that stimulates growth factor receptors on the cell surface.
B)Production of a protein that is closely related to the Ras protein.
C)Introduction of a viral oncogene with tyrosine-specific protein kinase activity.
D)Introduction of a viral oncogene that is closely related to the product of the human myc oncogene.
E)Production of viral proteins that bind tightly to the human p53 and pRb proteins.
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11
Akt (protein kinase B) is a protein kinase whose activation causes, among other effects:

A)Cell cycle arrest.
B)Progression through the G2 checkpoint.
C)Activation of mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases.
D)Activation of phosphoinositide 3-kinase.
E)Inhibition of apoptosis.
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k this deck
12
Loss of heterozygosity in genomic locations close to the site of the mutation is observed in the malignant tumors of many patients with inherited cancer susceptibility.The most likely cause for loss of heterozygosity in these patients is:

A)A missense mutation in the intact copy of the affected tumor suppressor gene.
B)A nonsense mutation in the intact copy of the affected tumor suppressor gene.
C)A frameshift mutation in the intact copy of the tumor suppressor gene.
D)Amplification of the affected oncogene.
E)Mitotic crossing over of the affected chromosome.
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Unlock for access to all 12 flashcards in this deck.