Meiosis-like Functions in Oncogenesis: A New View of Cancer

Cancer cells have many abnormal characteristics enabling tumors to grow, spread, and avoid immunologic and therapeutic destruction. Central to this is the innate ability of populations of cancer cells to rapidly evolve. One feature of many cancers is that they activate genes that are normally associ...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer research (Chicago, Ill.) Ill.), 2017-11, Vol.77 (21), p.5712-5716
Hauptverfasser: McFarlane, Ramsay J, Wakeman, Jane A
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container_title Cancer research (Chicago, Ill.)
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creator McFarlane, Ramsay J
Wakeman, Jane A
description Cancer cells have many abnormal characteristics enabling tumors to grow, spread, and avoid immunologic and therapeutic destruction. Central to this is the innate ability of populations of cancer cells to rapidly evolve. One feature of many cancers is that they activate genes that are normally associated with distinct developmental states, including germ cell-specific genes. This has historically led to the proposal that tumors take on embryonal characteristics, the so called embryonal theory of cancer. However, one group of germline genes, not directly associated with embryonic somatic tissue genesis, is the one that encodes the specific factors to drive the unique reductional chromosome segregation of meiosis I, which also results in chromosomal exchanges. Here, we propose that meiosis I-specific modulators of reductional segregation can contribute to oncogenic chromosome dynamics and that the embryonal theory for cancer cell growth/proliferation is overly simplistic, as meiotic factors are not a feature of most embryonic tissue development. We postulate that some meiotic chromosome-regulatory functions contribute to a soma-to-germline model for cancer, in which activation of germline (including meiosis) functions drive oncogenesis, and we extend this to propose that meiotic factors could be powerful sources of targets for therapeutics and biomonitoring in oncology. .
doi_str_mv 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-17-1535
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source MEDLINE; American Association for Cancer Research; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Animals
Biological evolution
Biomonitoring
Cancer
Carcinogenesis - genetics
Cell Transformation, Neoplastic - genetics
Chromosome Segregation
Chromosomes
Embryogenesis
Historical account
Humans
Immunomodulation
Meiosis
Meiosis - genetics
Models, Genetic
Neoplasms - genetics
Neoplasms - pathology
Oncogenes - genetics
Recombination, Genetic
Tumorigenesis
Tumors
title Meiosis-like Functions in Oncogenesis: A New View of Cancer
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