Literature DB >> 22105565

Cancer: a de-repression of a default survival program common to all cells?: a life-history perspective on the nature of cancer.

Mark Vincent1.   

Abstract

Cancer viewed as a programmed, evolutionarily conserved life-form, rather than just a random series of disease-causing mutations, answers the rarely asked question of what the cancer cell is for, provides meaning for its otherwise mysterious suite of attributes, and encourages a different type of thinking about treatment. The broad but consistent spectrum of traits, well-recognized in all aggressive cancers, group naturally into three categories: taxonomy ("phylogenation"), atavism ("re-primitivization") and robustness ("adaptive resilience"). The parsimonious explanation is not convergent evolution, but the release of an highly conserved survival program, honed by the exigencies of the Pre-Cambrian, to which the cancer cell seems better adapted; and which is recreated within, and at great cost to, its host. Central to this program is the Warburg Effect, whose malign influence permeates well beyond aerobic glycolysis to include biomass interconversion and genomic heuristics. Warburg-type metabolism and genomic instability are targets whose therapeutic disablement is a major priority.
Copyright © 2012 WILEY Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22105565     DOI: 10.1002/bies.201100049

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bioessays        ISSN: 0265-9247            Impact factor:   4.345


  29 in total

Review 1.  Mitostemness.

Authors:  Elisabet Cuyàs; Sara Verdura; Núria Folguera-Blasco; Cristian Bastidas-Velez; Ángel G Martin; Tomás Alarcón; Javier A Menendez
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2018-07-02       Impact factor: 4.534

2.  Targeting cancer's weaknesses (not its strengths): Therapeutic strategies suggested by the atavistic model.

Authors:  Charles H Lineweaver; Paul C W Davies; Mark D Vincent
Journal:  Bioessays       Date:  2014-07-14       Impact factor: 4.345

3.  Stochasticity and determinism in cancer creation and progression.

Authors:  Paul C Davies; David B Agus
Journal:  Converg Sci Phys Oncol       Date:  2016-01-07

4.  Altered interactions between unicellular and multicellular genes drive hallmarks of transformation in a diverse range of solid tumors.

Authors:  Anna S Trigos; Richard B Pearson; Anthony T Papenfuss; David L Goode
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-05-08       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Endogenous Voltage Potentials and the Microenvironment: Bioelectric Signals that Reveal, Induce and Normalize Cancer.

Authors:  Brook Chernet; Michael Levin
Journal:  J Clin Exp Oncol       Date:  2013

Review 6.  F-18 fluoromisonidazole for imaging tumor hypoxia: imaging the microenvironment for personalized cancer therapy.

Authors:  Joseph G Rajendran; Kenneth A Krohn
Journal:  Semin Nucl Med       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 4.446

Review 7.  Morphogenetic fields in embryogenesis, regeneration, and cancer: non-local control of complex patterning.

Authors:  Michael Levin
Journal:  Biosystems       Date:  2012-04-20       Impact factor: 1.973

Review 8.  From single cells to deep phenotypes in cancer.

Authors:  Sean C Bendall; Garry P Nolan
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2012-07-10       Impact factor: 54.908

Review 9.  Convergent Evolution, Evolving Evolvability, and the Origins of Lethal Cancer.

Authors:  Kenneth J Pienta; Emma U Hammarlund; Robert Axelrod; Sarah R Amend; Joel S Brown
Journal:  Mol Cancer Res       Date:  2020-03-31       Impact factor: 5.852

10.  Study on attractors during organism evolution.

Authors:  Andrzej Kasperski; Renata Kasperska
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-05-05       Impact factor: 4.379

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