Ní Leathlobhair Máire, Gulland Frances M D, Murchison Elizabeth P
Transmissible Cancer Group, Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB3 0ES, UK.
The Marine Mammal Center, 2000 Bunker Road, Sausalito, CA, 94965, USA.
Wellcome Open Res. 2017 Jun 22;2:46. doi: 10.12688/wellcomeopenres.11483.1. eCollection 2017.
Urogenital carcinoma is a highly metastatic cancer affecting California sea lions ( ). The disease has high prevalence amongst stranded animals, and is one of the most commonly observed cancers in wildlife. The genital localisation of primary tumours suggests the possibility that coital transmission of an infectious agent could underlie this disease. Otarine herpesvirus type 1 has been associated with lesions, however a causative role for this virus has not been confirmed. We investigated the possibility that urogenital carcinoma might be clonally transmissible, spread by the direct transfer of cancer cells. Analysis of sequences at the mitochondrial DNA control region in seven matched tumour and host pairs confirmed that tumour genotypes were identical to those of their matched hosts and did not show similarity with tumours from other individuals. Thus our findings suggest that urogenital carcinoma in California sea lions is not clonally transmitted, but rather arises from transformed host cells.
泌尿生殖系统癌是一种影响加州海狮的高转移性癌症( )。该疾病在搁浅动物中具有很高的患病率,是野生动物中最常见的癌症之一。原发性肿瘤的生殖器定位表明,感染因子的性交传播可能是这种疾病的基础。1型海兽疱疹病毒已与病变相关,但尚未证实该病毒具有致病作用。我们研究了泌尿生殖系统癌可能通过癌细胞的直接转移进行克隆传播的可能性。对七对匹配的肿瘤和宿主线粒体DNA控制区序列的分析证实,肿瘤基因型与其匹配宿主的基因型相同,与其他个体的肿瘤没有相似性。因此,我们的研究结果表明,加州海狮的泌尿生殖系统癌不是克隆传播的,而是由宿主细胞转化产生的。