Breast cancer, like other cancers,
occurs because of an interaction between an environmental (external)
factor and a genetically susceptible host. Normal cells divide as many
times as needed and stop. They attach to other cells and stay in place
in tissues. Cells become cancerous when they lose their ability to stop
dividing, to attach to other cells, to stay where they belong, and to
die at the proper time.
Normal cells will commit cell suicide (apoptosis)
when they are no longer needed. Until then, they are protected from
cell suicide by several protein clusters and pathways. One of the
protective pathways is the PI3K/AKT pathway; another is the RAS/MEK/ERK
pathway. Sometimes the genes along these protective pathways are
mutated in a way that turns them permanently "on", rendering the cell
incapable of committing suicide when it is no longer needed. This is one
of the steps that causes cancer in combination with other mutations.
Normally, the PTEN
protein turns off the PI3K/AKT pathway when the cell is ready for cell
suicide. In some breast cancers, the gene for the PTEN protein is
mutated, so the PI3K/AKT pathway is stuck in the "on" position, and the
cancer cell does not commit suicide.
Mutations that can lead to breast cancer have been experimentally linked to estrogen exposure.
Failure of immune surveillance, the removal of malignant cells throughout one's life by the immune system. Abnormal growth factor signaling in the interaction between stromal cells and epithelial cells can facilitate malignant cell growth. In breast adipose tissue, overexpression of leptin leads to increased cell proliferation and cancer.
In the United States, 10 to 20 percent of patients with breast cancer
and patients with ovarian cancer have a first- or second-degree
relative with one of these diseases. The familial tendency to develop
these cancers is called hereditary breast—ovarian cancer syndrome. The best known of these, the BRCA mutations,
confer a lifetime risk of breast cancer of between 60 and 85 percent
and a lifetime risk of ovarian cancer of between 15 and 40 percent. Some
mutations associated with cancer, such as , BRCA1 and BRCA2,
occur in mechanisms to correct errors in DNA. These mutations are
either inherited or acquired after birth. Presumably, they allow further
mutations, which allow uncontrolled division, lack of attachment, and
metastasis to distant organs.
However there is strong evidence of residual risk variation that goes
well beyond hereditary BRCA gene mutations between carrier families.
This is caused by unobserved risk factors.
This implicates environmental and other causes as triggers for breast
cancers. The inherited mutation in BRCA1 or BRCA2 genes can interfere
with repair of DNA cross links and DNA double strand breaks (known
functions of the encoded protein)
These carcinogens cause DNA damage such as DNA cross links and double
strand breaks that often require repairs by pathways containing BRCA1
and BRCA2. However, mutations in BRCA genes account for only 2 to 3 percent of all breast cancers. About half of hereditary breast–ovarian cancer syndromes involve unknown genes.
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