School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Science, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Sydney Informatics Core Research Facility, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Sci Rep. 2017 Mar 24;7(1):423. doi: 10.1038/s41598-017-00439-7.
Devil facial tumour disease (DFTD) has decimated wild populations of Tasmanian devils (Sarcophilus harrisii) due to its ability to avoid immune detection and pass from host to host by biting. A small number of devils have been observed to spontaneously recover from the disease which is otherwise fatal. We have sequenced the genomes of these rare cases and compared them to the genomes of devils who succumbed to the disease. Genome-wide association, based on this limited sampling, highlighted two key genomic regions potentially associated with ability to survive DFTD. Following targeted genotyping in additional samples, both of these loci remain significantly different between cases and controls, with the PAX3 locus retaining significance at the 0.001 level, though genome-wide significance was not achieved. We propose that PAX3 may be involved in a regulatory pathway that influences the slowing of tumour growth and may allow more time for an immune response to be mounted in animals with regressed tumours. This provides an intriguing hypothesis for further research and could provide a novel route of treatment for this devastating disease.
恶魔面部肿瘤病(DFTD)通过咬噬在宿主间传播,从而逃避免疫检测,致使塔斯马尼亚恶魔(Sarcophilus harrisii)野外种群大量减少。少数恶魔会自发地从这种致命疾病中恢复过来。我们对这些罕见病例的基因组进行了测序,并将其与因该病而死亡的恶魔的基因组进行了比较。基于这种有限的采样,全基因组关联分析突出了两个与抵抗 DFTD 能力相关的关键基因组区域。在对其他样本进行靶向基因分型后,这两个位点在病例和对照组之间仍然存在显著差异,PAX3 基因座的差异具有统计学意义(P < 0.001),尽管未达到全基因组显著水平。我们推测 PAX3 可能参与了一个调节通路,影响肿瘤生长的减缓,并可能为肿瘤消退的动物产生免疫反应提供更多的时间。这为进一步的研究提供了一个有趣的假设,并可能为这种毁灭性疾病提供一种新的治疗途径。