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© Provided by Australian Broadcasting Corporation Understanding cancer throughout evolutionary history has inspired new ways to treat it. (ABC Science: Rex
Smeal)
Cancer has touched most of our lives, taking down friends in their prime and plaguing the older years of
loved ones. But — from a biological perspective — why?
Cancer is responsible for a huge amount of animal death, so surely we should have evolved defences
against its malignant spread.
Understanding how and why cancer evolved may help us tackle the big C in humans, according to cancer
biologist Darren Saunders of the University of New South Wales.
By understanding why cancers have evolved, scientists are uncovering new ways to treat them.
Applying evolutionary theory to cancer research has also inspired new ways of tackling treatment-resistant
tumours.
For the first few billion years of life on our planet, single-celled organisms had the globe to themselves.
But at some point in deep time, cells began to team up and multicellular life arose.
Being multicellular has many benefits, according to Dr Saunders. Cells cooperate and work toward a
common goal.
This cooperation of trillions of cells allows us to have the incredibly complex structures we enjoy, like our
brain.
But being multicellular comes at a cost. According to Dr Saunders, that cost is cancer.
Cancers occurs when cells start growing uncontrollably and lose their function. They become deadly when
they spread and grow around the body, disrupting organ function.
Cancer is multicellularity gone wrong — tumour cells that have lost their ability to sense their context and
cooperate with the cells around them.
"They start behaving like raucous toddlers and ignore the fact that there are other cells around trying to do
their jobs," Dr Saunders said.
Cancer cells do not revert to acting as if they were a primitive single-cellular organism, Dr Saunders said,
but they do take on some of the characteristics of a more primitive cell.
For example, cells in many parts of the body, such as the lining of the gut, are meant to stay put. But when
they become cancerous they move and spread, much like a single-celled organism would.
also carry a legacy from our single-celled past in our DNA.
We
When early multicellular life evolved, some cells had to give up independent proliferation to focus on other
tasks, said evolutionary ecologist and geneticist Beata Ujvari of Deakin University.
Within the genetic code of every multicellular organism is information on how to divide independently and
infinitely, like a single-celled ancestor, Dr Ujvari said.
"Some of our cells are able to reignite that information and start proliferating, start dividing independently
from the other cells."
The answer, according to Dr Saunders, is that most cancers occur after reproductive age — once an
organism has already passed its genetic material on.
This means that a vulnerability to cancer in later life can be passed down to the next generation.
But evolution hasn't been completely slack when it comes to cancer, according to Dr Ujvari. Our bodies
have many strategies to try and prevent it.
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"All multicellular organisms have a gene called the TP53 tumour suppressor gene. It's one of the key genes
which prevent the abnormal proliferation of cells," she said.
Some animals, such as whales and elephants, are particularly good at supressing cancers.
This is surprising, as being large-bodied, they have more cells. And the more cells an animal has, the more
opportunities there are, statistically, for things to go wrong. But this is not the case.
So whales' and elephants' surprising resistance to cancer has led researchers to investigate whether they
could hijack the cancer defences of these behemoths.
This is where the TP53 tumour suppressor gene comes in: these animals have more copies of the gene than
most other multicellular life.
Researcher are developing ways to isolate the proteins that this gene produces in elephants and, eventually,
use them to create cancer resistance in humans.
It's complicated, Dr Ujvari said, but it may in part be explained by the grandmother hypothesis.
"Older women have a really strong role in bringing up the grandkids. They are providing support and they
are beneficial for the fitness of the next generation," she said.
"Therefore, selection has been pushing suppression [of cancer] beyond the reproductive period.
"Women in general, not for all cancers, but in general, are able to cope better with cancer then men and
react
better to treatment."
Senior whale and elephant females also have an important social role for the herd or pod, Dr Ujvari said.
This may be one of the factors which contributes to their longevity and cancer resistance.
Early research into prostate cancer that tested a regimen inspired by evolutionary ecology showed a
significantly better response when compared to conventional treatment, she said.
Dr Ujvari explains this with the metaphor of a forest, where out-of-control mice represent cancer cells in the
body.
If owls enter this forest, only mice who avoid open spaces will survive to breed, leading (over generations)
to a population of timid mice who can avoid owls.
Cancer treatment often has the same effect as these owls. It wipes out all but some of the cancer cells,
where the ones left to multiply are the most resistant to the treatment.
But, if snakes are introduced to this forest, the shy mice lose their advantage. With two predators at work,
the mice might be eradicated.
The predator-prey dynamics of this forest is beginning to be applied to treating cancer, Dr Ujvari said.
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A second treatment acts like the snake, attacking the remaining cells in a way they have not adapted to
fight.
"For example, we can first use immunotherapy to attack the cancer. Once we suppress the tumours then we
can introduce an additional therapy, chemotherapy, to eventually wipe out the malignant cells." Dr Ujvari
said.
By understanding the deep roots of why cancer exists, scientists are uncovering new ways to treat it.
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