| c-onc | cellular oncogene |
|---|---|
| ONC | oncogene; oncology; Orthopaedic Nursing Certificate; over-the-needle catheter |
| src | Rous sarcoma oncogene |
| V-ONC | viral oncogene |
| oncogene proteins v-fos | Transforming proteins coded by fos oncogenes. These proteins have been found in the finkel-biskis-jinkins (fbj-msv) and finkel-biskis-reilly (fbr-msv) murine sarcoma viruses which induce osteogenic sarcomas in mice. The fbj-msv v-fos gene encodes a p55 kD protein and the fbr-msv v-fos gene encodes a p75 kD fusion protein. (12 Dec 1998) |
|---|---|
| oncogene proteins, viral | Products of viral oncogenes, most commonly retroviral oncogenes. They usually have transforming and often protein kinase activities. (12 Dec 1998) |
| oncogene proteins v-mos | Transforming proteins coded by mos oncogenes. The v-mos proteins were originally isolated from the moloney murine sarcoma virus (mo-msv). (12 Dec 1998) |
| recessive oncogene | <molecular biology> A single copy of this gene issufficient to suppress cell proliferation, the loss of both copies of the gene contributes to cancer formation. (09 Oct 1997) |
| viral oncogene | <molecular biology> A viral gene that contributes to cancer development in vertebrate hosts. (09 Oct 1997) |
| cellular oncogene | <molecular biology> A normal gene that, when mutated or improperly expressed, can cause cancer to develop. (09 Oct 1997) |
| c-oncogene | <molecular biology> A normal gene which has a tumour-producing insert that may have originated from a virus in it, turning it into a proto-oncogene. When these genes are sufficiently mutated, amplified, or over-expressed (transcribed too many times), they can begin to produce cancers. (05 Jan 1998) |
| proto-oncogene | <molecular biology> The normal, cellular equivalent of an oncogene, thus usually a gene involved in the signalling or regulation of cell growth. In general, cellular proto-oncogenes are prefixed with a c, rather than their abnormal viral counterparts, that are prefixed with a v, for example c myc and v myc. They are fragments of DNA, related to oncogenes but are the normal switches used to control growth and tissue repair. (06 Oct 1997) |
| proto-oncogene protein p21(ras) | Cellular protein encoded by the c-ras genes. The protein has GTPase activity and is involved in transmembrane signal transduction as a guanine nucleotide binding protein. Elevated levels of p21 c-ras have been associated with neoplasia. (12 Dec 1998) |
| proto-oncogene protein pp60(c-src) | <enzyme> Membrane-associated tyrosine-specific kinase encoded by the c-src genes. It has an important role in cellular growth control. Truncation of carboxy-terminal residues in pp60(c-src) leads to pp60(v-src) which has the ability to transform cells. This kinase pp60 c-src should not be confused with csk, also known as c-src kinase. Registry number: EC 2.7.1.- (12 Dec 1998) |
| dominant oncogene | <genetics, molecular biology, oncology> A gene that stimulates cell proliferation and can drastically increase the risk of cancer development when present in a single copy. (09 Oct 1997) |
| immortalising oncogene | <molecular biology> A gene that upon transfectionenables a primary cell to grow indefinitely in culture. (09 Oct 1997) |
| oncogene | <molecular biology, oncology> Mutated and/or overexpressed version of a normal gene of animal cells (the proto-oncogene) that in a dominant fashion can release the cell from normal restraints on growth and thus alone or in concert with other changes, convert a cell into a tumour cell. (18 Nov 1997) |
| oncogene protein gp140(v-fms) | Transforming glycoprotein coded by the fms oncogene from the susan mcdonough strain of feline sarcoma virus (sm-fesv). The oncogene protein v-fms lacks sequences, which, in the highly homologous proto-oncogene protein c-fms (csf-1 receptor), normally serve to regulate its tyrosine kinase activity. The missing sequences in v-fms mimic the effect of ligand and lead to constitutive cell growth. The protein gp120(v-fms) is post-translationally modified to generate gp140(v-fms). (12 Dec 1998) |
| oncogene protein p21(ras) | Transforming protein encoded by ras oncogenes. Point mutations in the cellular ras gene (c-ras) can also result in a mutant p21 protein that can transform mammalian cells. Oncogene protein p21(ras) has been directly implicated in human neoplasms, perhaps accounting for as much as 15-20% of all human tumours. (12 Dec 1998) |
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