Sunday, July 26, 2009

CANCER CELL BIOLOGY

Cells are the units of life. Normal cells act on each other to control their growth and other properties in balance with the entire organism. They are closely regulated by a variety of genetic and biochemical processes. For example, biological feedbacks act in much the same way that a thermostat controls heat production by a furnace. Cancer is a disease of ‘‘outlaw’’ cells, cells that have lost their normal relationship to the whole organism. A tumor originates when single normal cells mutate and develop into cancer cells, termed transformed cells. Mutations produce defects in their cellular regulatory mechanisms, changing their biochemistry and biology so that they differ from normal cells in structure and functioning and grow at the wrong times and in the wrong places.

Briefly, each cell is surrounded by a membrane that separates it from its surroundings, which include other cells, nutrients, and molecules that regulate growth and other functions. Within the cell is a fluid, cytoplasm, containing proteins and structures, including mitochondria (the source of energy for a cell , that produce chemical energy and the machinery (ribosomes) that synthesizes proteins. The nucleus, which contains the genetic material, sits in the middle of the cell. Location within a cell can determine a molecule’s possible biochemical interactions and effects. Cells of cancers develop into disorganized arrangements, and their nuclear shapes are abnormal, properties that are scrutinized carefully during diagnosis and are used to classify the stage of a cancer.

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