Respuesta :
I believe the answer is B. My reasoning is, a cancer cell is a mutated cell a tumer is a group of the cancerous cells bunched together which can be a sign of unregulated cell growth. I believe that is the answer but I may be wrong.
The presence of an oncogene leads to the formation of a tumor because cell division is unregulated (Option b).
- The cell cycle has specific restrictions points that control the progression of the cell cycle by activating specific signaling pathways (e.g., programmed cell death or apoptosis).
- In cancer cells, specific genes called oncogenes are found overexpressed, thereby dysregulating these restriction points of the cell cycle.
- In consequence, cancer cells are no longer able to control their own division and therefore proliferate in an uncontrolled manner.
- For example, the N-myc gene is an oncogene overexpressed in neuroblastoma, which is a childhood tumor of embryonal neuronal cells.
In conclusion, the presence of an oncogene leads to the formation of a tumor because cell division is unregulated (Option b).
Learn more in:
https://brainly.com/question/7310602