Cancer: The roots of evil
go deep in time
Discovery of a primordial cancer in a primitive animal
Discovery of a primordial cancer in a primitive animal
Every year around 450,000 people in Germany are
diagnosed with cancer. Each one of them dreams of a victory in the battle
against it. But can cancer ever be completely defeated? Researchers at Kiel
University (CAU) have now reached a sobering conclusion: “cancer is as old as
multi-cellular life on earth and will probably never be completely eradicated”,
says Professor Thomas Bosch in his latest research results. The study by an
international team led by Bosch was published today (Monday, June 24) in the prestigious
scientific journal Nature Communications.
The so-called cancer genes are ancient
The causes of tumours are the so-called cancer genes. As from when evolution started producing tumours is an issue that the scientists Tomislav Domazet-Lošo and Diethard Tautz from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology in Plön have been investigating for several years, using bio-informational methods and databases that they have developed in-house. “During the search for the origin of the cancer gene, we unexpectedly made a discovery in the ancient group of animals”, explains Domazet-Lošo. He is one of the authors of the present study and is currently working at the Ruder Bošković Institute and the Catholic University of Croatia inZagreb .
“Our data predicted that the first multi-cellular animals already had most of
the genes which can cause cancer in humans.” What was missing until now was, on
the one hand, evidence that these animals can actually suffer from tumours and,
on the other, the molecular understanding of the mechanisms of tumour formation
in these simple animals.
Cause of tumours: error in the programming of cell death
The research team led by the evolutionary biologist Professor Thomas Bosch from the Zoological Institute of Kiel University have now achieved an impressive understanding of the roots of cancer. Bosch has been investigating stem cells and the regulation of tissue growth in Hydra, a phylogenetic old polyp, for many years. “Now we have discovered tumour-bearing polyps in two different species of Hydra, an organism very similar to corals”, emphasises Bosch regarding the first result of the new study. This provides proof that tumours indeed exist in primitive and evolutionary old animals.
The team also tracked down the cellular cause of the tumours along the entire body axis. For the first time they were able to show that the stem cells, which are programmed for sex differentiation, accumulate in large quantities and are not removed naturally by programmed cell death. Interestingly, these tumours affect only female Hydra polyps and resemble ovarian cancers in humans.
“When undertaking more detailed molecular analyses of the tumours we found a gene that becomes active dramatically in tumour tissue and that normally prevents the programmed cell death”, explains Alexander Klimovich, a scholarship student at the Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation at the Zoological Institute of Kiel University and co-lead author of the current study regarding the second finding of the study. “As a non-functioning cell death mechanism is also made responsible for the growth and spread of tumours in many types of human cancer, striking similarities appear here to cancer in humans”, continues Klimovich.
The third finding of the scientists was to show that tumour cells are invasive. This means that if tumour cells are introduced into a healthy organism, they can trigger tumour growth there. Therefore Bosch reaches the following conclusion from his research into Hydra species: “The invasive characteristic of cancer cells is also an evolutionary old feature.”
Tumours have deep roots in evolution
The funds that are being deployed throughout the world in the campaign against cancer are enormous. It was estimated that in theUS alone, more than 500 billion dollars
were invested in cancer research by 2012. The worldwide research has led to
improved preventative, diagnostic and treatment methods, which can definitely
record successes. However it is precisely as far as some frequent tumours are
concerned where only slow progress has been achieved. Every second person
affected by cancer still succumbs to the disease today. In Germany alone
every fourth person dies of cancer and this trend is rising. (World Cancer
Report 2014) These figures were an incentive for the National Institute of
Health in the US
to launch a network of Physical Science-Oncology Centers, a new initiative that
seeks to bridge intellectual barriers between diverse scientific disciplines.
Paul Davies, a well-known theoretical physicist and popular science writer who
now leads one such center in Phoenix ,
Arizona , recently concluded:
“Clearly, we will fully understand cancer only in the context of biological
history.” (The Guardian, 2012)
According to the research team led by Bosch, the findings of primordial tumours in Hydra are a breakthrough step in that direction: “Our research reconfirms that primordial animals such as Hydra polyps provide an enormous amount of information to help us understand such complex problems as ‘cancer’. Our study also makes it unlikely that the ‘War on Cancer’ proclaimed in the 1970s can ever be won. However, knowing your enemy from it origins is the best way to fight it, and win many battles”, says Bosch.
The so-called cancer genes are ancient
The causes of tumours are the so-called cancer genes. As from when evolution started producing tumours is an issue that the scientists Tomislav Domazet-Lošo and Diethard Tautz from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology in Plön have been investigating for several years, using bio-informational methods and databases that they have developed in-house. “During the search for the origin of the cancer gene, we unexpectedly made a discovery in the ancient group of animals”, explains Domazet-Lošo. He is one of the authors of the present study and is currently working at the Ruder Bošković Institute and the Catholic University of Croatia in
Cause of tumours: error in the programming of cell death
The research team led by the evolutionary biologist Professor Thomas Bosch from the Zoological Institute of Kiel University have now achieved an impressive understanding of the roots of cancer. Bosch has been investigating stem cells and the regulation of tissue growth in Hydra, a phylogenetic old polyp, for many years. “Now we have discovered tumour-bearing polyps in two different species of Hydra, an organism very similar to corals”, emphasises Bosch regarding the first result of the new study. This provides proof that tumours indeed exist in primitive and evolutionary old animals.
The team also tracked down the cellular cause of the tumours along the entire body axis. For the first time they were able to show that the stem cells, which are programmed for sex differentiation, accumulate in large quantities and are not removed naturally by programmed cell death. Interestingly, these tumours affect only female Hydra polyps and resemble ovarian cancers in humans.
“When undertaking more detailed molecular analyses of the tumours we found a gene that becomes active dramatically in tumour tissue and that normally prevents the programmed cell death”, explains Alexander Klimovich, a scholarship student at the Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation at the Zoological Institute of Kiel University and co-lead author of the current study regarding the second finding of the study. “As a non-functioning cell death mechanism is also made responsible for the growth and spread of tumours in many types of human cancer, striking similarities appear here to cancer in humans”, continues Klimovich.
The third finding of the scientists was to show that tumour cells are invasive. This means that if tumour cells are introduced into a healthy organism, they can trigger tumour growth there. Therefore Bosch reaches the following conclusion from his research into Hydra species: “The invasive characteristic of cancer cells is also an evolutionary old feature.”
Tumours have deep roots in evolution
The funds that are being deployed throughout the world in the campaign against cancer are enormous. It was estimated that in the
According to the research team led by Bosch, the findings of primordial tumours in Hydra are a breakthrough step in that direction: “Our research reconfirms that primordial animals such as Hydra polyps provide an enormous amount of information to help us understand such complex problems as ‘cancer’. Our study also makes it unlikely that the ‘War on Cancer’ proclaimed in the 1970s can ever be won. However, knowing your enemy from it origins is the best way to fight it, and win many battles”, says Bosch.
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