It can give cancer to all the other cells, so it causes more cells to be cancerous. It goes all around the body and the number of the cancer cells will get much more than the first.
A stem cell becomes cancerous and creates the tumor or other cancer. Most of the other cancer cells either do not divide or only divide slowly. The cancerous stem cells divide and create cancer cells and other cancerous stem cells. Removing the entire cancer but leaving a few of the cancerous stem cells in the body does not cure the cancer.
Yes, cancerous cells don't die when they're supposed to.
Cancer is related to the cell cycle because when a person gets infected, the cancerous cells attack healthy cells and then mutate the cells and then it rapidly creates new, mutated cells. The mutated cells then attack more healthy cells and the process is repeated. Cancerous cells can be killed with radiation
Most cancerous tumors are detected at advanced phase of the cell cycle.
No, sickle cell disease is not cancerous.
Various factors can disrupt the cell cycle, including DNA damage, errors in DNA replication, exposure to radiation or chemicals, and infections by certain viruses. Additionally, genetic mutations or problems with regulatory proteins involved in the cell cycle can also lead to disruptions.
Cancer starts when your cell goes through cell cycle, which is the reproduction of cells. Your cell copies DNA so that there are 4 strands in your cell. The nuclear membrane disappear. The cells then line up in the middle of the cell. When the cells separate on to either side of the cell this can get messed up. If three DNA strands go to one side and one goes to the other side they become cancerous cells. When these cancerous cells build up they become tumors.
Cancer can disrupt the normal regulation of the cell cycle, leading to uncontrolled cell division and tumor formation. Mutations in genes that control cell cycle checkpoints can allow cancer cells to bypass mechanisms that normally prevent excessive cell growth. This disruption of the cell cycle can contribute to the unchecked proliferation of cancer cells.
what can cause the cell cycle to be uncontrolled is that if a pathogen gets into the cell the cell will turn into a cancer cell and that will make the cell cycle uncontrolledif your cell turns into a cancer cell then you will have cancer cells reproducing faster than a normal cell(a normal cell is supposed to reproduce every 22 hour's a cancer cell reproduces every 10 hours)
Cancer cells often exhibit uncontrolled cell division due to mutations in genes that regulate the cell cycle. This results in faster proliferation and reduced apoptosis. Additionally, cancer cells can bypass cell cycle checkpoints, leading to genomic instability and unchecked growth.
HPV can cause cancer by integrating its DNA into the host cell's DNA, leading to abnormal cell growth and potentially cancerous changes.
skin cancer (any cancer for that matter) is when the cell cycle becomes completely unregulated and only performs cell division without its normal cell functions.