From TheBestLinks.com
An oncogene is a gene that can causes a cell to develop into a tumor cell, possibly resulting in cancer.
Protooncogene
A protooncogene is a gene that is involved in signal transduction and execution of mitogenic signals, usually through its protein product. Upon activation, it (or its product) becomes a tumor inducing agent, an oncogene.
Activation
The protooncogene can become an oncogene by a relatively small modification of its original function. There are two basic activation types:
- A mutation within a protooncogene can cause a change in the protein structure, caused by
- An increase in protein concentration, caused by
- an increase of protein expression (through misregulation)
- an increase of protein stability, prolonging its existence and thus its activity in the cell
- a gene duplication, resulting in a doubled amount of protein in the cell
Oncogene
Growth factors
Growth factors are usually secreted by a few special cells to induce cell proliferation in other cells. If a cell that usually does not produce growth factors suddenly starts to do so (because it developed an oncogene), it will thereby induce its own uncontrolled proliferation (autocrine loop), as well as the proliferation of neighboring cells.
There are six known classes of protein kinases and related proteins that can become an oncogene:
- Receptor tyrosine kinases that become constitutive (permanently) active like the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR), etc.
- Cytoplasmic tyrosine kinases like the Src-family, Syk-ZAP-70 family and BTK family of tyrosine kinases.
- Regulatory GTPases, for example, the Ras protein.
- Cytoplasmic Serine/Threonine kinases and their regulatory subunits, for example, the Raf kinase, and cyclin-dependent kinases (through overexpression).
- Adaptor proteins in signal transduction.
- Transcription factors.
Related articles
es:oncogén
ja:がん遺伝子
Related links
Top visited
0 of
0 links
[no links posted yet]
>> place link >>
Discussion
Last posted
0 of
0 messages
[no messages posted yet]
>> post message >>
Watch
You can
add this article to your own "watchlist" and receive e-mail notification about all changes in this page.