Hypothesis: Cancer Is a Disease of Evolved Trade-Offs Between Neoplastic Virulence and Transmission

被引:1
作者
Bordonaro, Michael [1 ]
机构
[1] Geisinger Commonwealth Sch Med, Dept Basic Sci, 525 Pine St, Scranton, PA 18509 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF CANCER | 2018年 / 9卷 / 10期
关键词
virulence; transmission; cancer; evolution; selection; HORIZONTAL TRANSMISSION; PUBLIC-GOODS; STEM-CELLS; EVOLUTION; RESISTANCE; DETERMINANTS; MODEL; HETEROGENEITY; PROGRESSION; DYNAMICS;
D O I
10.7150/jca.24679
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Virulence is defined as the ability of a pathogen to cause morbidity and/or mortality in infected hosts. The relationship between virulence and transmissibility is complex; natural selection may promote decreased virulence to enhance host mobility and increase the probability for transmission, or transmissibility may be enhanced by increased virulence, leading to higher pathogen load and, in some cases, superior evasion from host defenses. An evolutionary trade-off exists between the ability of pathogens to maintain opportunities for long-term transmission via suppressed virulence and increased short-term transmission via enhanced virulence. We propose an analogy between transmissibility and virulence in microbial pathogens and in cancer. Thus, in the latter case, the outcome of invasive growth and metastasis is analogous to transmissibility, and virulence is defined by high rates of proliferation, invasiveness and motility, potential for metastasis, and the extent to which the cancer contributes to patient morbidity and mortality. Horizontal and vertical transmission, associated with increased or decreased pathogen virulence respectively, can also be utilized to model the neoplastic process and factors that would increase or decrease tumor aggressiveness. Concepts of soft vs. hard selection and evolutionary game theory can optimize our understanding of carcinogenesis and therapeutic strategies. Therefore, the language of transmissibility, horizontal vs. vertical transmission, selection, and virulence can be used to inform approaches to inhibit tumorigenic progression, and, more generally, for cancer prevention and treatment.
引用
收藏
页码:1707 / 1724
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Virulence-driven trade-offs in disease transmission: A meta-analysis
    Acevedo, Miguel A.
    Dillemuth, Forrest P.
    Flick, Andrew J.
    Faldyn, Matthew J.
    Elderd, Bret D.
    EVOLUTION, 2019, 73 (04) : 636 - 647
  • [2] Virulence-mediated infectiousness and activity trade-offs and their impact on transmission potential of influenza patients
    McKay, Brian
    Ebell, Mark
    Dale, Ariella Perry
    Shen, Ye
    Handel, Andreas
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2020, 287 (1927)
  • [3] Geographic variation and trade-offs in parasitoid virulence
    Fors, Lisa
    Markus, Robert
    Theopold, Ulrich
    Ericson, Lars
    Hamback, Peter A.
    JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY, 2016, 85 (06) : 1595 - 1604
  • [4] Trade-offs in cancer and reproduction
    Gosden, RG
    HUMAN REPRODUCTION UPDATE, 2001, 7 (04) : 360 - 362
  • [5] Evolution of host resistance and trade-offs between virulence and transmission potential in an obligately killing parasite
    Berenos, C.
    Schmid-Hempel, P.
    Wegner, K. Mathias
    JOURNAL OF EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY, 2009, 22 (10) : 2049 - 2056
  • [6] Cancer: A disease at the crossroads of trade-offs
    Jacqueline, Camille
    Biro, Peter A.
    Beckmann, Christa
    Moller, Anders Pape
    Renaud, Francois
    Sorci, Gabriele
    Tasiemski, Aurelie
    Ujvari, Beata
    Thomas, Frederic
    EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS, 2017, 10 (03): : 215 - 225
  • [7] Trade-offs in the evolution of virulence in an indirectly transmitted macroparasite
    Davies, CM
    Webster, JP
    Woolhouse, MEJ
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2001, 268 (1464) : 251 - 257
  • [8] Trade-offs between host tolerances to different pathogens in plant-virus interactions
    Montesv, Nuria
    Vijayan, Viji
    Paganv, Israel
    VIRUS EVOLUTION, 2020, 6 (01)
  • [9] AN EXPERIMENTAL TEST OF THE TRANSMISSION-VIRULENCE TRADE-OFF HYPOTHESIS IN A PLANT VIRUS
    Doumayrou, Juliette
    Avellan, Astrid
    Froissart, Remy
    Michalakis, Yannis
    EVOLUTION, 2013, 67 (02) : 477 - 486
  • [10] Transmission-recovery trade-offs to study parasite evolution
    Alizon, Samuel
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2008, 172 (03) : E113 - E121