Cancer and life-history traits: lessons from host–parasite interactions

Archive ouverte

Ujvari, Beata | Beckmann, Christa | Biro, Peter A | Arnal, Audrey | Tasiemski, Aurélie | Massol, François | Salzet, Michel | Mery, Frédéric | Boidin-Wichlacz, Céline | Missé, Dorothée | Renaud, François | Vittecoq, Marion | Tissot, Tazzio | Roche, Benjamin | Poulin, Robert | Thomas, Frédéric

Edité par CCSD ; Cambridge University Press -

International audience. Despite important differences between infectious diseases and cancers, tumour development (neoplasia) can nonetheless be closely compared to infectious disease because of the similarity of their effects on the body. On this basis, we predict that many of the life-history (LH) responses observed in the context of host–parasite interactions should also be relevant in the context of cancer. Parasites are thought to affect LH traits of their hosts because of strong selective pressures like direct and indirect mortality effects favouring, for example, early maturation and reproduction. Cancer can similarly also affect LH traits by imposing direct costs and/or indirectly by triggering plastic adjustments and evolutionary responses. Here, we discuss how and why a LH focus is a potentially productive but under-exploited research direction for cancer research, by focusing our attention on similarities between infectious disease and cancer with respect to their effects on LH traits and their evolution. We raise the possibility that LH adjustments can occur in response to cancer via maternal/paternal effects and that these changes can be heritable to (adaptively) modify the LH traits of their offspring. We conclude that LH adjustments can potentially influence the transgenerational persistence of inherited oncogenic mutations in populations.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Host manipulation by cancer cells: Expectations, facts, and therapeutic implications

Archive ouverte | Tissot, Tazzio | CCSD

International audience. Similar to parasites, cancer cells depend on their hosts for sustenance, proliferation and reproduction, exploiting the hosts for energy and resources, and thereby impairing their health and ...

Cancer brings forward oviposition in the fly Drosophila melanogaster

Archive ouverte | Arnal, Audrey | CCSD

International audience. Hosts often accelerate their reproductive effort in response to a parasitic infection, especially when their chances of future reproduction decrease with time from the onset of the infection....

The guardians of inherited oncogenic vulnerabilities

Archive ouverte | Arnal, Audrey | CCSD

International audience. Similar to seemingly maladaptive genes in general, the persistence of inherited cancer‐causing mutant alleles in populations remains a challenging question for evolutionary biologists. In add...

Chargement des enrichissements...