| Literature DB >> 32236102 |
Carlos Sonnenschein1,2, Ana M Soto1,2.
Abstract
Despite over a century of intensive efforts, the great gains promised by the War on Cancer nearly 50 years ago have not materialized. Since 1999, we have analyzed the lack of progress in explaining and "curing" cancer by examining the merits of the premises that determine how cancer is understood and treated. Our ongoing critical analyses have aimed at clarifying the sources of misunderstandings at the root of the cancer puzzle while providing a plausible and comprehensive biomedical perspective as well as a new theory of carcinogenesis that is compatible with evolutionary theory. In this essay, we explain how this new theory, the tissue organization field theory (TOFT), can help chart a path to progress for cancer researchers by explaining features of cancer that remain unexplainable from the perspective of the still hegemonic somatic mutation theory (SMT) and its variants. Of equal significance, the premises underlying the TOFT offer new perspectives on basic biological phenomena.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32236102 PMCID: PMC7153880 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3000670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 9.593
Comparison between the SMT and the TOFT.
| SMT | TOFT | |
|---|---|---|
| Proliferative quiescence. | Proliferation with variation and motility. | |
| Changes in the DNA of the founder cell makes this cell unable to control its proliferation. As a consequence, a neoplasm will be formed. | Carcinogenesis is “development gone awry.” Chronic abnormal interactions between mesenchyme/stroma and parenchyma of a given morphogenetic field are responsible for the appearance of a neoplasm. | |
| Level of biological organization at which carcinogenesis takes place | Cellular | Tissue |
| Target disrupted by the carcinogenic insult | DNA | Morphogenetic field |
| Role of DNA mutations | Causal | Irrelevant, epiphenomenon |
| Consequence of the insult | 1. Uncontrolled cell proliferation. | 1. Altered tissue structure involving hyperplasia, metaplasia, dysplasia, and carcinoma. |
| Weaknesses and strengths of theories of carcinogenesis | 1. Failure in explaining “foreign-body” carcinogenesis due to a lack of induced DNA mutations by physical or inert materials. | 1. Explains “foreign-body” carcinogenesis as an unspecific tissue disruption of a morphogenetic field. |
| Corollary | Irreversibility. “Once a cancer cell, always a cancer cell.” | Reversibility. Due to spontaneous and induced normalization, cancer is not destiny. |
Abbreviations: SMT, somatic mutation theory; TOFT, tissue organization field theory