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What is the relationship between genes
and cancer?
Cancer is a disease of genes gone awry. Genes that
control the orderly replication of cells become damaged, allowing the cell
to reproduce without restraint and eventually to spread into neighboring
tissues and set up growths throughout the body.
All cancer is genetic, in that it is triggered by altered genes.
However, just a small portion of cancer is inherited: a mutation carried
in reproductive cells, passed on from one generation to the next, and
present in cells throughout the body. Most cancers come from random
mutations that develop in body cells during one's lifetime - either as a
mistake when cells are going through cell division or in response to
injuries from environmental agents such as radiation or chemicals.
Cancer usually arises in a single cell. The cell's progress from normal
to malignant to metastatic appears to follow a series of distinct steps,
each one controlled by a different gene or set of genes. Several types of
genes have been implicated.
Oncogenes normally encourage cell growth; when mutated or
overexpressed, they can flood cells with signals to keep on dividing.
Tumor-suppressor genes normally restrain cell growth; when missing or
inactivated by a mutation, they allow cells to grow and divide
uncontrollably. (The inherited genes that predispose for breast and
ovarian cancer, Li-Fraumeni syndrome, retinoblastoma, Wilms' tumor, and
familial adenomatous polyposis are malfunctioning tumor-suppressor genes.)
DNA repair genes appear to trigger cancer - and perhaps other
inherited disorders - not by spurring cell growth but by failing to
correct mistakes that occur as DNA copies itself, letting mutations
accumulate at thousands of sites. (Genes that have been linked to
hereditary colon cancer are such "proofreader"
genes.)

Cancer usually arises in a single cell. The cell's progress from normal
to malignant to metastatic appears to follow a series of distinct steps,
each controlled by a different gene or set of genes. Persons with
hereditary cancer already have the first mutation.
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