Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Are cancers newly evolved species?
27 July 2011 [20:00] - Today.Az
Cancer patients may view their tumors as parasites taking over their bodies, but this is more than a metaphor for Peter Duesberg, a molecular and cell biology professor at the University of California, Berkeley.
Cancerous tumors are parasitic organisms, he said. Each one
is a new species that, like most parasites, depends on its host for
food, but otherwise operates independently and often to the detriment of
its host.
In a paper published in the July 1 issue of the journal Cell Cycle,
Duesberg and UC Berkeley colleagues describe their theory that
carcinogenesis -- the generation of cancer -- is just another form of
speciation, the evolution of new species.
A molecular biologists has long believed that cancer results from
chromosome disruption rather than a handful of gene mutations, which is
the dominant theory today. That idea has led him to propose that cancers
have actually evolved new chromosomal karyotypes that qualify them as
autonomous species, akin to parasites and much different from their
human hosts.
"Cancer is comparable to a bacterial level of complexity, but still
autonomous, that is, it doesn't depend on other cells for survival; it
doesn't follow orders like other cells in the body, and it can grow
where, when and how it likes," said Duesberg. "That's what species are
all about."
This novel view of cancer could yield new insights into the growth
and metastasis of cancer, Duesberg said, and perhaps new approaches to
therapy or new drug targets. In addition, because the disrupted
chromosomes of newly evolved cancers are visible in a microscope, it may
be possible to detect cancers earlier, much as today's Pap smear relies
on changes in the shapes of cervical cells as an indication of
chromosomal problems that could lead to cervical cancer.
Carcinogenesis and evolution
The idea that cancer formation is akin to the evolution of a new
species is not new, with various biologists hinting at it in the late 20th
century. Evolutionary biologist Julian S. Huxley wrote in 1956 that
"Once the neoplastic process has crossed the threshold of autonomy, the
resultant tumor can be logically regarded as a new biologic species …."
Last year, Dr. Mark Vincent of the London Regional Cancer Program and University of Western Ontario argued in the journal Evolution that carcinogenesis and the clonal evolution of cancer cells are speciation events in the strict Darwinian sense.
The evolution of cancer "seems to be different from the evolution of a
grasshopper, for instance, in part because the cancer genome is not a
stable genome like that of other species. The challenging question is,
what has it become?" Vincent said in an interview. "Duesberg's argument
from karyotype is different from my argument from the definition of a
species, but it is consistent."
Vincent noted that there are three known transmissible cancers,
including devil facial tumor disease, a "parasitic cancer" that attacks
and kills Tasmanian devils. It is transmitted from one animal to another
by a whole cancer cell. A similar parasitic cancer, canine
transmissible venereal tumor, is transmitted between dogs via a single
cancer cell that has a genome dating from the time when dogs were first
domesticated. A third transmissible cancer was found in hamsters.
"Cancer has become a successful parasite," Vincent said.
Mutation theory vs. aneuploidy
Duesbeg's arguments derive from his controversial proposal that the
reigning theory of cancer -- that tumors begin when a handful of mutated
genes send a cell into uncontrolled growth -- is wrong. He argues,
instead, that carcinogenesis is initiated by a disruption of the
chromosomes, which leads to duplicates, deletions, breaks and other
chromosomal damage that alter the balance of tens of thousands of genes.
The result is a cell with totally new traits -- that is, a new
phenotype.
"I think Duesberg is correct by criticizing mutation theory, which
sustains a billion-dollar drug industry focused on blocking these
mutations," said Vincent, a medical oncologist. "Yet very, very few
cancers have been cured by targeted drug therapy, and even if a drug
helps a patient survive six or nine more months, cancer cells often find
a way around it."
Chromosomal disruption, called aneuploidy, is known to cause disease.
Down syndrome, for example, is caused by a third copy of chromosome 21,
one of the 23 pairs of human chromosomes. All cancer cells are
aneuploid, Duesberg said, though proponents of the mutation theory of
cancer argue that this is a consequence of cancer, not the cause.
Key to Duesberg's theory is that some initial chromosomal mutation --
perhaps impairing the machinery that duplicates or segregates
chromosomes in preparation for cell division -- screws up a cell's
chromosomes, breaking some or making extra copies of others. Normally
this would be a death sentence for a cell, but in rare cases, he said,
such disrupted chromosomes might be able to divide further, perpetuating
and compounding the damage. Over decades, continued cell division would
produce many unviable cells as well as a few still able to divide
autonomously and seed cancer.
Duesberg asserts that cancers are new species because those viable
enough to continue dividing develop relatively stable chromosome
patterns, called karyotypes, distinct from the chromosome pattern of
their human host. While all known organisms today have stable
karyotypes, with all cells containing precisely two or four copies of
each chromosome, cancers exhibit a more flexible and unpredictable
karyotype, including not only intact chromosomes from the host, but also
partial, truncated and mere stumps of chromosomes.
"If humans changed their karyotype -- the number and arrangement of
chromosomes -- we would either die or be unable to mate, or in very rare
cases become another species," Duesberg said. But cancer cells just
divide and make more of themselves. They don't have to worry about
reproduction, which is sensitive to chromosomal balance. In fact, as
long as the genes for mitosis are still intact, a cancer cell can
survive with many disrupted and unbalanced chromosomes, such as those
found in an aneuploid cell, he said.
The karyotype does change as a cancer cell divides, because the
chromosomes are disrupted and thus don't copy perfectly. But the
karyotype is "only flexible within a certain margin," Duesberg said.
"Within these margins it remains stable, despite its flexibility."
Karyographs display karyotype variability
Duesberg and his colleagues developed karyographs as a way to display
the aneuploid nature of a cell's karyotype and its stability across
numerous cell cultures. Using these karyographs, he and his colleagues
analyzed several cancers, clearly demonstrating that the karyotype is
amazingly similar in all cells of a specific cancer line, yet totally
different from the karyotypes of other cancers and even the same type of
cancer from a different patient.
HeLa cells are a perfect example. Perhaps the most famous cancer cell
line in history, HeLa cells were obtained in 1951 from a cervical
cancer that eventually killed a young black woman named Henrietta Lacks.
The 60-year-old cell line derived from her cancer has a relatively
stable karyotype that keeps it alive through division after division.
"Once a cell has crossed that barrier of autonomy, it's a new
species," Duesberg said. "HeLa cells have evolved in the laboratory and
are now even more stable than they probably were when they first arose."
The individualized karyotypes of cancers resemble the distinct
karyotypes of different species,, Duesberg said. While biologists have
not characterized the karyotypes of most species, no two species are
known that have the same number and arrangement of chromosomes,
including those of, for example, gorillas and humans, who share 99
percent of their genes.
Duesberg argues that his speciation theory explains cancer's
autonomy, immortality and flexible, but relatively stable, karyotype. It
also explains the long latency period between initial aneuploidization
and full blown cancer, because there is such a low probability of
evolving an autonomous karyotype.
"You start with a chromosomal mutation, that is, aneuploidy perhaps
from X-rays or cigarettes or radiation, that destabilizes and eventually
changes your karyotype or renders it non-viable," he said. "The rare
viable aneuploidies of cancers are, in effect, the karyotypes of new
species."
Duesberg hopes that the carcinogenesis-equals-speciation theory will
spur new approaches to diagnosing and treating cancer. Vincent, for
example, suspects that cancers are operating right at the edge of
survivability, maintaining genomic flexibility while retaining the
ability to divide forever. Driving them to evolve even faster, he said,
"might push them over the edge."
Duesberg's colleagues are postdoctoral fellow Daniele Mandrioli and
research associate Amanda McCormack of UC Berkeley and graduate student
Joshua M. Nicholson in the Department of Biological Sciences at Virginia
Polytechnic Institute.
Duesberg's research is funded by the Abraham J. and Phyllis Katz
Foundation, philanthropists Dr. Christian Fiala, Rajeev and Christine
Joshi, Robert Leppo and Peter Rozsa of the Taubert Memorial Foundation,
other private sources and the Forschungsfonds der Fakultät für Klinische
Medizin Mannheim der Universität Heidelberg. /Science Daily/
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