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A New Perspective on Tumor Progression: Evolution via Selection for Function

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Version 1 2024-10-08, 22:43
journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-08, 22:43 authored by Frédéric Thomas, James Degregori, Andriy Marusyk, Antoine M Dujon, Beata UjvariBeata Ujvari, Jean-Pascal Capp, Robert Gatenby, Aurora M Nedelcu
Abstract Tumorigenesis is commonly attributed to Darwinian processes involving natural selection among cells and groups of cells. However, progressing tumors are those that also achieve an appropriate group phenotypic composition (GPC). Yet, the selective processes acting on tumor GPCs are distinct from that associated with classical Darwinian evolution (i.e., natural selection based on differential reproductive success) as tumors are not genuine evolutionary individuals and do not exhibit heritable variation in fitness. This complex evolutionary scenario is analogous to the recently proposed concept of “selection for function” invoked for the evolution of both living and non-living systems. Therefore, we argue that it is inaccurate to assert that Darwinian processes alone account for all the aspects characterizing tumorigenesis and cancer progression; rather, by producing the genetic and phenotypic diversity required for creating novel GPCs, these processes fuel the evolutionary success of tumors that is dependent on selection for function at the tumor level.

History

Location

Oxford, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

Language

en

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Evolution, Medicine, and Public Health

Volume

12

Article number

eoae021

Pagination

172-177

ISSN

2050-6201

eISSN

2050-6201

Issue

1

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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