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CELL DIVISION AND CANCER Unit 7 - Mitosis

Cell Division and Cancer

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Cell Division and Cancer. Unit 7 - Mitosis. Mitosis. All cells in your body divide In children and teens, cells divide to assist in growth In adults, cells divide to replace old cells Your cells are really good at knowing when they should and shouldn’t divide. Cell Regulators. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Cell Division and Cancer

CELL DIVISION AND CANCERUnit 7 - Mitosis

Page 2: Cell Division and Cancer

Mitosis All cells in your body divide

In children and teens, cells divide to assist in growth

In adults, cells divide to replace old cells

Your cells are really good at knowing when they should and shouldn’t divide

Page 3: Cell Division and Cancer

Cell Regulators Inside and on the outside of your cells,

you have “regulators” that control cell division.

These regulators act as body guards for the cell, making sure that everything goes according to plan

Page 4: Cell Division and Cancer

Internal Cell Regulators These are proteins that respond to

events inside the cell.

Example Make sure mitosis doesn’t happen until

chromosomes are replicated

Page 5: Cell Division and Cancer

External Cell Regulators Proteins that respond to events that

happen outside the cell

Examples Speed up or slow down cell division Proteins on neighbor cells can tell the cells

around them to stop growing or to slow down so that they don’t impede other tissue or cells.

Page 6: Cell Division and Cancer

What is Cancer? Cancer is a disorder in which some of the

body’s own cells lose their ability to regulate cell growth.

Cancerous cells do not respond to the signals from other cells that tell them to stop or slow down their growth.

When the cells do not stop dividing, a tumor is formed.

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Benign and Malignant Tumors Benign Tumors

Non-cancerous tumors Cysts Keloids

Malignant Tumors Cancerous tumors

Here, bad cells (those that cannot stop dividing) break off into your blood or lymph systems and travel to other parts of the body. There, they infect the cells around them, causing mass division of cancer cells.

Page 10: Cell Division and Cancer

Invasion and Metastasis

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Fact According to the American Cancer

Society, in 2012 there have already been 65, 750 new cases of cancer reported.

Page 13: Cell Division and Cancer

4 Basic Types of Cancer Carcinoma

Cancer that begins in the skin or tissues that cover internal organs

Example: melanoma which is a type of skin cancer.

Page 14: Cell Division and Cancer

4 Basic Types of Cancer Sarcoma

Cancer that begins in the bones, cartilage, fat, muscles, blood vessels, or other connective/supportive tissue

Example: osteosarcoma which is cancer in the bones

Page 15: Cell Division and Cancer

4 Basic Types of Cancer Leukemia

Cancer that starts in blood-forming tissue such as the bone marrow and causes large numbers of abnormal blood cells to be produced and enter the blood.

Example – Acute Myeloid Leukemia is a cancer that begins in the white blood cells

Normal WBC

Leukemic WBC

Page 16: Cell Division and Cancer

4 Basic Types of Cancer Lymphoma/

Myeloma Cancer that begins

in cells associated with the immune system

Example: Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma is a cancer that starts in the lymphocytes (cells of your immune system).

Page 17: Cell Division and Cancer

Some Causes of Cancer Exposure to carcinogens

Asbestos lung cancer

Formaldehyde leukemia's, lymphomas, etc.

Exposure to UV rays Tanning Can cause skin cancer

Melanoma Basal cell carcinoma

Page 18: Cell Division and Cancer

Causes of Cancer Smoking cigarettes

Contain many carcinogenic chemicals Can cause a variety of cancer

Lung cancer (most common) Throat cancer Oral cancer

Other tobacco products Chewing tobacco

Oral cancer

Page 19: Cell Division and Cancer

Other Causes of Cancer Heredity

Breast cancer Kidney Cancer

Viruses HIV

Kaposi Sarcoma HPV

cervical cancer Hepatitis B

liver cancer

Page 20: Cell Division and Cancer

How do we detect cancer? MRI Endoscopy X-ray Biopsy Ultra sound

Liver cancers Ovarian cancers

Mammogram Breast cancer For women 40 y/o and

older

Page 21: Cell Division and Cancer

How can we treat cancer? Chemotherapy

Drugs given to target rapidly growing cells Not only kills cancer

cells but any rapidly growing cells like hair follicle cells

Surgery Remove the tumor

and surrounding tissue

Radiation treatment Applying

concentrated amount of energy to cancer cells to damage their DNA

Often times a combination of treatments can be used

Page 22: Cell Division and Cancer

Vaccines Preventative

To prevent the emergence of cancer in healthy people

Examples HBV

Hepatitis B which can cause liver cancer

Gardasil Cervical cancer

Therapeutic/Treatment Used to treat

cancer