Title: Cancer: From a Darwins Perspective
1Cancer From a Darwins Perspective
- Giri Ramsingh M.D
- 10.9.09
2Why study evolutionary biology?
No biological problem is solved until both the
proximate and evolutionary causation has been
elucidated Ernest Mayr
A recurring fault in a complex machinery or plant
would require evaluating not just the immediate
fault line but the entire system design
3- Cancer biologists How?
- Evolutionary biologists Why?
4Evolutionary steps
Inheritable genetic mutation
Unstable conditions (limited resources,
environmental challenges)
Competition
Positive selection of beneficial traits
Diversification of molecules, cells, tissues and
physiological processes
5Evolutionary process
CANCER SUSCEPTIBILITY
DEVELOPMENT OF CANCER CLONE
6Evolution aims towards perfection but is never
perfect
Changes in design of a product often results in
a transient decline in its quality. Subsequent
adjustment in a production line restores the
product to it original high quality James
Graham, Cancer Selection 1992
7Evolutionary feature Potential
consequences
Just selects from the best available options
Deletrious trade-off and malfuction under stress
Rapidly changing circumstances result in
genotype-environment mismatch
No eyes to future
The fitness test for natural selection is
survival and reproductive success
The post-reproductive life can reveal the
design limitations
8If cancer is detrimental why is it so common?
During Natural Selection all that matters is
reproductive success
As the clock tics on, the intrinsic design
limitations or trade offs of our bodies come into
play.
9Nature-Nurture mismatch
Our social behavior has rapidly changed since
stone age
Normal genes and gene variants selected then now
operate in a changed environment
10Skin cancer and human migration
Loss of melanin upon migration from Africa to
Europe
Fastest rising rate of cancer in Northern Europe
11Diet and Cancer
- Binge eating and little exercise
- High calorie intake associated with breast,
colon, prostate and pancreatic cancer - - Lower cancer rates in rodents under
calorie restriction
- Excess intake and storage in times of plenty
provides - insurance against times of famine and long
distance travel/migration. - Dramatic increase in incidence of cancer in
Arizona Pima Indians, - Canadian Inuits, Australian Aborigines and
polynasians.
12Breast and prostate cancer
- 1/11 men will develop prostate cancer
- 1/10 women will develop breast cancer
13- Humans have the largest breast size proportionate
to the body - And the largest prostate size proportionate to
the body - Breast cancer incidence extremely high in humans
compared to other species, especially in the
developed countries - Spontaneous clinically diagnosed prostate cancer
is uniquely human.
14Non-seasonal estrus with cyclic mammary gland
priming is uniquely human
- Normal constraints to breast cancer
- (hunter-gatherer society)
- -Late menarche
- Early, spaced, repetitive pregnancy
- Protracted breast feeding
Dr.Theodorico Borgognoni examining Breast in a
nunnery 1275
15Prostate Cancer
- Only function- lubrication of sperm passage
- High incidence in Europe and North America
- Increase in age-specific incidence last few
decades (independent of screening)
16Keeping prostate active beyond reproductive age-
? Nature-Nurture mismatch
Hayes, Brit J of cancer 2000
17?genes
- 10 of breast and prostate cancer is familial
- 40 of prostate cancer and 30 of breast cancer
is attributed to inherited susceptibility ( based
on studies comparing monozygotic and dizygotic
twins.
18Winners become losers
- Most of the alleles (SNPs) associated with
increased risk of breast and prostate cancer is
involved in increasing the sex hormone receptor
signaling - Women with these variants - enhanced fertility
and a greater ability to pass on the genes - Men with these variants- enhanced prostate
priming, mate-attracting potency, hunting,
survivability and enhanced ability of passing on
the genes
19Large prostate Enhanced hormone receptor
signalling Diet Longer post reproductive
life ?others
Non seasonal estrous cycle Enhanced hormone
receptor signalling Early menarchy Late
pregnancy Fewer pregnancy Decreased breast
feeding Dietary- increased calories Longer post
reproductive life
Nature
mismatch
Nurture
20Childhood Cancer
- 3/1000 develop cancer in first 20 yrs of life
- Adult cancer- 83 arise from epithelia
- Pediatric cancer- Predominantly bone, brain and
immune system
21- All these organs ( bone, brain and immune
system) have undergone recent pronounced
evolutionary change
22Osteosarcoma
- Typically occurs in the growth zones of the most
rapidly growing bones in adolescents - Most occur in the top 75th percentile for height
for their age group - Highest risk at pubertal growth spurt ( for each
of the bones) - Pubertal growth spurt is a recent evolutionary
change unique to humans
23- Immune system- Leukemia/lymphoma
- Fastest evolving system in any species because of
evolving pathogens ( leukemia/lymphoma common in
most mammal) - CNS tumors- Three fold increase in brain size
compared to chimpanzees.
24- Promoting spermatogenesis Cancer testis
associated (CTA) genes in malignant cells eg
melanoma - Tug-of war over resources during gestation
Cadherins- adhesion and invasion of embryo, ANG
gene in placental angiogeneis - Signals for morphogeneis and apoptosis Notch,
Hedgehog, Hox etc
25Clonal Evolution of Cancer Natural Selection
- Self sufficiency of cells in signals controlling
growth - Loss of sensitivity to anti-growth signals
- Evasion of apoptosis via mutation or loss of gate
keeper genes - Development of limitless replicative potential
- Sustained angiogenesis
- Tissue invasion and metastasis
26Clonal Selection
27Ecological theater of Carcinogenesis(Predation
and Competition)
- Escaping predation
- Immune system attack on early cancer cells
(immunosurveillance) - Escape mechanisms-
- alpha-defensins in some cancers (lung, renal
etc), - low oxygen tissue environment,
- Down regulating MHC complex in tumor cells
- Increased regulatory T-cells in the tumor
microenvironment
28- Winning the competition
- competition between cancer and normal cell and
among different clones of cancer cells.
Competition for nutrients, waste disposal
Growth advantage Mutations in growth signal/
cell survival pathways Nutrients Glycolytic
phenotype ?local acidosis?extracellular matrix
degradation?invasion Oxygen/nutrients/waste
disposal Neovascularization Maintaining
diversity (diversity leads to faster
evolution) Genomic instability (aneuploidic and
polyploidic tumors are more aggressive) Migration
and distant colonization Invasion, cell-cell
interaction
29Tough environment promotes evolution
- Stable microenvironment relatively
homogenous cells - Unstable/disturbed microenvironment diversity
of microenvironment diversity of clones
faster evolution to cancer
30Reversing the competitive advantage
- Reducing the number of cancer cells that can be
supported in the tissue - Targetting the genomic instability of cancer
cells - Reducing the negative competitive effects of
cancer cells on normal cells - Increasing the negative competitive effect of
normal cells on cancer cells
31Hunting for Cancer related genes
- Genes subject to rapid evolution along human
lineage - Special emphasis on genes expressed during
gamete, embryonic and placental development - Sequencing the genes in much wider range of
primates and other mammals - Identification of positively selected amino acid
sites and linking adaptive molecular evolution to
aspects of life history and mating system.
32Understand the Cancer Ecosystem
Somatic evolution
Ecology
Mutation
microenvironment
Tumor cell
Natural Selection
Tumor progression
33Minimize the Mismatch
Macro Evolution
Ecology
Mutation
Macro Environment
Human Species
Natural Selection
Cancer susceptibility