Literature DB >> 18930739

Comparable ecological dynamics underlie early cancer invasion and species dispersal, involving self-organizing processes.

Diana E Marco1, Sergio A Cannas, Marcelo A Montemurro, Bo Hu, Shi-Yuan Cheng.   

Abstract

Occupancy of new habitats through dispersion is a central process in nature. In particular, long-distance dispersal is involved in the spread of species and epidemics, although it has not been previously related with cancer invasion, a process that involves cell spreading to tissues far away from the primary tumour. Using simulations and real data we show that the early spread of cancer cells is similar to the species individuals spread and we suggest that both processes are represented by a common spatio-temporal signature of long-distance dispersal and subsequent local proliferation. This signature is characterized by a particular fractal geometry of the boundaries of patches generated, and a power-law scaled, disrupted patch size distribution. In contrast, invasions involving only dispersal but not subsequent proliferation ("physiological invasions") like trophoblast cells invasion during normal human placentation did not show the patch size power-law pattern. Our results are consistent under different temporal and spatial scales, and under different resolution levels of analysis. We conclude that the scaling properties are a hallmark and a direct result of long-distance dispersal and proliferation, and that they could reflect homologous ecological processes of population self-organization during cancer and species spread. Our results are significant for the detection of processes involving long-range dispersal and proliferation like cancer local invasion and metastasis, biological invasions and epidemics, and for the formulation of new cancer therapeutical approaches.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18930739      PMCID: PMC2873664          DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2008.09.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Theor Biol        ISSN: 0022-5193            Impact factor:   2.691


  46 in total

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Journal:  J Evol Biol       Date:  2006-01       Impact factor: 2.411

6.  Invasion by extremes: population spread with variation in dispersal and reproduction.

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Review 8.  The tumour microenvironment as a target for chemoprevention.

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Review 9.  Cancer as an evolutionary and ecological process.

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Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2008-04-01       Impact factor: 12.701

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  6 in total

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Review 4.  (Dis)similarities between the Decidual and Tumor Microenvironment.

Authors:  Jelena Krstic; Alexander Deutsch; Julia Fuchs; Martin Gauster; Tina Gorsek Sparovec; Ursula Hiden; Julian Christopher Krappinger; Gerit Moser; Katrin Pansy; Marta Szmyra; Daniela Gold; Julia Feichtinger; Berthold Huppertz
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2022-05-04

Review 5.  Cancer and pregnancy: parallels in growth, invasion, and immune modulation and implications for cancer therapeutic agents.

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6.  From forest and agro-ecosystems to the microecosystems of the human body: what can landscape ecology tell us about tumor growth, metastasis, and treatment options?

Authors:  Simon P Daoust; Lenore Fahrig; Amanda E Martin; Frédéric Thomas
Journal:  Evol Appl       Date:  2012-11-22       Impact factor: 5.183

  6 in total

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