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Beyond genetics: driving cancer with the tumour microenvironment behind the wheel
by
Almagro, Jorge
, Yuan, Shaopeng
, Fuchs, Elaine
in
631/208/68
/ 631/67/327
/ 631/67/68/2486
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Cancer
/ Cancer Research
/ Embryos
/ Epigenetics
/ Genetic disorders
/ Genetic factors
/ Genetic transformation
/ Invasiveness
/ Mutation
/ Oncogenes
/ Review Article
/ Reviews
/ Transformed cells
/ Tumor microenvironment
/ Tumorigenesis
2024
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Beyond genetics: driving cancer with the tumour microenvironment behind the wheel
by
Almagro, Jorge
, Yuan, Shaopeng
, Fuchs, Elaine
in
631/208/68
/ 631/67/327
/ 631/67/68/2486
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Cancer
/ Cancer Research
/ Embryos
/ Epigenetics
/ Genetic disorders
/ Genetic factors
/ Genetic transformation
/ Invasiveness
/ Mutation
/ Oncogenes
/ Review Article
/ Reviews
/ Transformed cells
/ Tumor microenvironment
/ Tumorigenesis
2024
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Beyond genetics: driving cancer with the tumour microenvironment behind the wheel
by
Almagro, Jorge
, Yuan, Shaopeng
, Fuchs, Elaine
in
631/208/68
/ 631/67/327
/ 631/67/68/2486
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedicine
/ Cancer
/ Cancer Research
/ Embryos
/ Epigenetics
/ Genetic disorders
/ Genetic factors
/ Genetic transformation
/ Invasiveness
/ Mutation
/ Oncogenes
/ Review Article
/ Reviews
/ Transformed cells
/ Tumor microenvironment
/ Tumorigenesis
2024
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Beyond genetics: driving cancer with the tumour microenvironment behind the wheel
Journal Article
Beyond genetics: driving cancer with the tumour microenvironment behind the wheel
2024
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Overview
Cancer has long been viewed as a genetic disease of cumulative mutations. This notion is fuelled by studies showing that ageing tissues are often riddled with clones of complex oncogenic backgrounds coexisting in seeming harmony with their normal tissue counterparts. Equally puzzling, however, is how cancer cells harbouring high mutational burden contribute to normal, tumour-free mice when allowed to develop within the confines of healthy embryos. Conversely, recent evidence suggests that adult tissue cells expressing only one or a few oncogenes can, in some contexts, generate tumours exhibiting many of the features of a malignant, invasive cancer. These disparate observations are difficult to reconcile without invoking environmental cues triggering epigenetic changes that can either dampen or drive malignant transformation. In this Review, we focus on how certain oncogenes can launch a two-way dialogue of miscommunication between a stem cell and its environment that can rewire downstream events non-genetically and skew the morphogenetic course of the tissue. We review the cells and molecules of and the physical forces acting in the resulting tumour microenvironments that can profoundly affect the behaviours of transformed cells. Finally, we discuss possible explanations for the remarkable diversity in the relative importance of mutational burden versus tumour microenvironment and its clinical relevance.
In their Review article, Fuchs and colleagues discuss how a single or a few mutations in adult cells can lead to invasive cancers without a high mutational burden, demonstrating that non-genetic factors induce the epigenetic changes necessary for tumorigenesis.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group
Subject
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