[Home]Oncogene

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An oncogene is a gene that causes a cell to develop into a tumor cell.

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:

Oncogene

Growth factors

[Growth factor]]s are usually secreted? by 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 neighbouring cells.

Protein kinases

There are six known classes of tyrosine kinases that can go onkogene:
  1. Receptor tyrosine kinases that become constitutive (permanently) active.
  2. Cytoplasmic tyrosine kinases, often products of viral oncogenes.
  3. Regulatory GTPases, for example, the [Ras kinase]?.
  4. Cytoplasmic Serine?/Threonine? kinases and their regulatory subunits, for example, the [Raf kinase]?, and cycline?s (through overexpression).
  5. [Adaptor protein]?s in signal transduction.
  6. [Transcription factor]?s.


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Last edited November 30, 2001 5:54 pm by Malcolm Farmer (diff)
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