asked 174k views
3 votes
Which process is typical of cancer?

-Replacement Of Damaged Lungs
-DNA Replication
-Cellular Death
-Uncontrolled Cell Division

2 Answers

2 votes

Answer:

uncontrolled cell division

Step-by-step explanation:

Cancer cells are cells gone wrong — in other words, they no longer respond to many of the signals that control cellular growth and death. Cancer cells originate within tissues and, as they grow and divide, they diverge ever further from normalcy. Over time, these cells become increasingly resistant to the controls that maintain normal tissue — and as a result, they divide more rapidly than their progenitors and become less dependent on signals from other cells. Cancer cells even evade programmed cell death, despite the fact that their multiple abnormalities would normally make them prime targets for apoptosis. In the late stages of cancer, cells break through normal tissue boundaries and metastasize (spread) to new sites in the body.

answered
User Kischa
by
8.9k points
1 vote

Answer:

Uncontrolled cell division

(and I think that HIV/AIDS Does the opposite; slows cell division)

answered
User Prateek Singh
by
7.7k points
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