Chapter 19: Problem 16
Explain why many oncogenic viruses contain genes whose products interact with tumor-suppressor proteins.
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Chapter 19: Problem 16
Explain why many oncogenic viruses contain genes whose products interact with tumor-suppressor proteins.
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Vanderbilt University Medical Center maintains a Web site (http://bioinfo.mc.vanderbilt.edu/TSGene/) that contains descriptions of tumor-suppressor genes, including 637 protein-coding genes and 79 noncoding segments of DNA. How can noncoding segments of DNA function or produce products that function as tumor suppressors?
Define tumor-suppressor genes. Why is a mutated single copy of a tumor- suppressor gene expected to behave as a recessive gene?
How does the environment contribute to cancer?
Can cancer be inherited or infectious?
Describe the steps by which the \(p 53\) gene responds to DNA damage and/or cellular stress to promote cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis. Given that \(p 53\) is a recessive gene and is not located on the X chromosome, why would people who inherit just one mutant copy of a recessive tumor-suppressor gene be at higher risk of developing cancer than those without the recessive gene?
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