Radiation is frequently used as part of the treatment of cancer. The radiation works by damaging DNA and components of the cell. Under what circumstances do you think radiation treatment is a good choice to treat cancer?
Ch. 14 - Analysis of Gene Function via Forward Genetics and Reverse Genetics

Sanders3rd EditionGenetic Analysis: An Integrated ApproachISBN: 9780135564172Not the one you use?Change textbook
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Sanders 3rd Edition
Ch. 14 - Analysis of Gene Function via Forward Genetics and Reverse Genetics
Problem C.6a
Sanders 3rd Edition
Ch. 14 - Analysis of Gene Function via Forward Genetics and Reverse Genetics
Problem C.6aChapter 14, Problem C.6a
Radiation is frequently used as part of the treatment of cancer. The radiation works by damaging DNA and components of the cell. How can radiation treatment control or cure cancer?
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Understand that cancer is characterized by uncontrolled cell division due to mutations in DNA that affect cell cycle regulation.
Recognize that radiation treatment works by causing damage to the DNA within cancer cells, such as breaks in the DNA strands or other molecular lesions.
Know that when DNA damage is severe and irreparable, it triggers cellular mechanisms leading to cell cycle arrest or programmed cell death (apoptosis), preventing further division of cancer cells.
Consider that radiation preferentially affects rapidly dividing cells, like cancer cells, more than most normal cells, which helps to control tumor growth.
Summarize that by damaging the DNA and inducing cell death in cancer cells, radiation treatment can reduce tumor size or eliminate cancerous cells, thereby controlling or potentially curing the cancer.

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Key Concepts
Here are the essential concepts you must grasp in order to answer the question correctly.
DNA Damage and Repair Mechanisms
Radiation causes breaks and mutations in DNA strands, disrupting the genetic information necessary for cell survival and division. Cells have repair mechanisms, but excessive damage overwhelms these systems, leading to cell death or malfunction. This is crucial in targeting rapidly dividing cancer cells.
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Repair Pathways
Cancer Cell Proliferation
Cancer cells divide uncontrollably and rapidly compared to normal cells. Radiation exploits this by damaging DNA during cell division, making cancer cells more susceptible to death because they cannot effectively repair the damage before replicating.
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Cancer Characteristics
Selective Targeting of Cancer Cells
Radiation therapy is designed to focus on tumor sites, minimizing damage to surrounding healthy tissue. The higher sensitivity of cancer cells to DNA damage allows radiation to control or eliminate tumors while sparing most normal cells, aiding in cancer treatment.
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Cancer Characteristics
Related Practice
Textbook Question
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You have cloned the mouse ortholog of the gene associated with human Huntington disease (HD) and wish to examine its expression in mice. Outline the approaches you might take to examine the temporal and spatial expression pattern at the cellular level.
Textbook Question
Radiation is frequently used as part of the treatment of cancer. The radiation works by damaging DNA and components of the cell. Is there a risk of damage to noncancer cells?
Textbook Question
Diagram the mechanism by which CRISPR–Cas functions in the immune system of bacteria and archaea.
Textbook Question
Why do most cancers require the mutation of multiple genes?
Textbook Question
Based on what you read in this chapter, Can a tumor arise from a single mutated cell? Are all the cells in a tumor identical?