| Literature DB >> 23396712 |
Simon P Daoust1, Lenore Fahrig, Amanda E Martin, Frédéric Thomas.
Abstract
Cancer is now understood to be a process that follows Darwinian evolution. Heterogeneous populations of cancerous cells that make up the tumor inhabit the tissue 'microenvironment', where ecological interactions analogous to predation and competition for resources drive the somatic evolution of cancer. The tumor microenvironment plays a crucial role in the tumor genesis, development, and metastasis processes, as it creates the microenvironmental selection forces that ultimately determine the cellular characteristics that result in the greatest fitness. Here, we explore and offer new insights into the spatial aspects of tumor-microenvironment interactions through the application of landscape ecology theory to tumor growth and metastasis within the tissue microhabitat. We argue that small tissue microhabitats in combination with the spatial distribution of resources within these habitats could be important selective forces driving tumor invasiveness. We also contend that the compositional and configurational heterogeneity of components in the tissue microhabitat do not only influence resource availability and functional connectivity but also play a crucial role in facilitating metastasis and may serve to explain, at least in part, tissue tropism in certain cancers. This novel work provides a compelling argument for the necessity of taking into account the structure of the tissue microhabitat when investigating tumor progression.Entities:
Keywords: cancer ecology; evolutionary medicine; landscape ecology; tissue microhabitat landscape
Year: 2012 PMID: 23396712 PMCID: PMC3567473 DOI: 10.1111/eva.12031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evol Appl ISSN: 1752-4571 Impact factor: 5.183
Definitions of common terms used in ecology and landscape ecology and their relevance to tumor landscape ecology. Idem indicates that the term, as defined in ecology and/or landscape ecology, does not differ as applied to cancer ecology
| Terms | Defined within ecology or landscape ecology | Applied to cancer ecology |
|---|---|---|
| Carrying capacity | Population size that can be sustained over the long term within a given area. | Maximum tumor size given the resources and space available within the local tissue microhabitat. |
| Community | Group of interacting species within a given area. | Assemblage of two or more genotypically and phenotypically distinct cancer cell populations within the tumor. |
| Cover type | A categorical classification of landscape features, based on a set of observable characteristics, for example, vegetation type. | A categorical classification of cell types, based on a set of observable characteristics. |
| Ecosystem disturbance | An event that disrupts an ecosystem sufficiently to change its functioning, usually involves removal of biomass. | Rapid drop in local resources (glucose, oxygen, etc.), chemotherapy, physical trauma or damage to tissue, etc. |
| Functional connectivity | Degree to which the landscape facilitates movement of the species or species group among its habitat patches | Degree to which the tissue stroma facilitates movement of cancer cells. |
| Grain size | Average size (diameter or area) of the patches in a landscape; a ‘coarse-grained’ landscape contains large patches. | |
| Habitat | Area that is inhabited by a particular species of animal, plant, or other type of organism. | Tissue microhabitat |
| Habitat patch | A discrete area of habitat of the species/species group. | A discrete area of habitat of the cancer cell population/group of populations. |
| Landscape | Area that is spatially heterogeneous in at least one factor of interest. | Spatial distribution of the components within and surrounding the local tissue microhabitat. |
| Landscape composition | The cover types present in a landscape, and the amounts of each. | Amount of each cell and macromolecule type within the tissue microhabitat. |
| Landscape configuration | Spatial distribution of the cover types in a landscape. | Spatial distribution of each cell and macromolecule type within the tissue microhabitat. |
| Landscape heterogeneity | Diversity and pattern complexity of cover types in the landscape; a landscape with more cover types in a more complex configuration is more heterogeneous. | Complexity of the tissue microhabitat in both composition and configuration of components. |
| Landscape matrix | Nonhabitat part of the landscape (which could be comprised of several cover types). | |
| Landscape structure | Composition, configuration, and heterogeneity of cover types. | Composition, configuration, and heterogeneity of noncancerous cells, extracellular matrix, and physical parameters such as gradients of oxygen, glucose, pH, and interstitial pressure |
| Long-distance dispersal (LDD) | Movement of animals, plants, or other organisms to new, usually separate habitats. | Metastasis |
| Population | A discrete group of individuals of the same species, where interactions among individuals in a population are much more frequent than interactions among individuals in different populations. | Group or cluster of cancer cells within a tumor that are similar enough in genotype to have nearly indistinguishable phenotypes. |
| Population growth | Increase in the number of individuals in a population over time. | Tumor growth |
| Scale | Spatial or temporal dimension of an object or process, characterized by both grain and extent. | |
| Spatially explicit metapopulation model | Population model in which the population is divided into discrete subpopulations, where dispersal among subpopulations depends on their spatial relationships. | |
| Spread/Invasion | Expansion of a species into a local area not previously occupied by it. | Tumor invasion of local tissue. |