Biology, asked by rdesai1402, 3 months ago

How DNA deplication is releated to cances!​

Answers

Answered by kotapranav21
0

Answer:

Cancer is out-of-control cell division. It involves a change in the DNA structure that causes an alteration of the normal DNA regulating mechanisms. The malignant (cancerous) cells no longer respond to normal regulatory signals. Cancer most often strikes older individuals.

Answered by hussainhussian
1

Answer:

Mistakes in the replication of DNA create cells that become cancerous

Cancer cells are essentially mutated cells. Cancer cells often have a mutation that disables the gene that regulates the replication of the cell. Normal healthy cells replicate themselves when a neighbor cells dies and then stop replicating. A cancer cells continues to replicate itself endlessly.

The process of copying the DNA is incredibly complex. Mistakes happen in the process that create cancerous cells. Cancer cells are created in the body every day in the process of copying the DNA in cell replication. The immune system is effective in destroying these cancerous cells before the cells can endlessly replicate themselves.

The disease of Cancer occurs when the cancerous cells replicate faster than the immune system can destroy them.

Explanation:

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