人类癌变的分子机制。

EXS Pub Date : 2006-01-01 DOI:10.1007/3-7643-7378-4_14
William B Coleman, Gregory J Tsongalis
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引用次数: 54

摘要

在过去的几十年里,密集的研究工作增加了我们对致癌作用的理解,并确定了癌症发展多步骤过程的遗传基础。肿瘤通过突变驱动的克隆扩增过程生长。在人类癌症中已经描述了几种形式的分子改变,这些改变通常可以分为染色体异常和核苷酸序列异常。大多数癌细胞表现出一种以基因组超突变为特征的表型,这表明基因组不稳定性可能先于关键靶基因的转化突变的获得。归根到底,癌症是一种基因表达异常的疾病,这些基因异常通过细胞增殖负介质(包括抑癌基因)的失活和细胞增殖正介质(包括原癌基因)的激活,促进了癌症的发病。在一些人类肿瘤系统中,特定的遗传改变已被证明与肿瘤发展和进展的明确的组织病理阶段相关。尽管突变对肿瘤发展的病因机制的重要性一直存在争议,但这种遗传病变的因果作用现在已被普遍接受为大多数人类癌症。因此,遗传病变代表了肿瘤转化、肿瘤发生和肿瘤进展过程的一个组成部分,因此代表了癌症检测和分期的潜在有价值的标志物。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Molecular mechanisms of human carcinogenesis.

Intensive research efforts during the last several decades have increased our understanding of carcinogenesis, and have identified a genetic basis for the multi-step process of cancer development. Tumors grow through a process of clonal expansion driven by mutation. Several forms of molecular alteration have been described in human cancers, and these can be generally classified as chromosomal abnormalities and nucleotide sequence abnormalities. Most cancer cells display a phenotype characterized by genomic hypermutability, suggesting that genomic instability may precede the acquisition of transforming mutations in critical target genes. Reduced to its essence, cancer is a disease of abnormal gene expression, and these genetic abnormalities contribute to cancer pathogenesis through inactivation of negative mediators of cell proliferation (including tumor suppressor genes) and activation of positive mediators of cell proliferation (including proto-oncogenes). In several human tumor systems, specific genetic alterations have been shown to correlate with well-defined histopathological stages of tumor development and progression. Although the significance of mutations to the etiological mechanisms of tumor development has been debated, a causal role for such genetic lesions is now commonly accepted for most human cancers. Thus, genetic lesions represent an integral part of the processes of neoplastic transformation, tumorigenesis, and tumor progression, and as such represent potentially valuable markers for cancer detection and staging.

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