Vittecoq Marion, Giraudeau Mathieu, Sepp Tuul, Marcogliese David J, Klaassen Marcel, Renaud François, Ujvari Beata, Thomas Frédéric
Institut de Recherche de la Tour du Valat Arles France.
CREEC/MIVEGEC IRD CNRS University of Montpellier Montpellier France.
Evol Appl. 2018 Mar 14;11(6):836-844. doi: 10.1111/eva.12608. eCollection 2018 Jul.
Both field and experimental evolution studies have demonstrated that organisms naturally or artificially exposed to environmental oncogenic factors can, sometimes rapidly, evolve specific adaptations to cope with pollutants and their adverse effects on fitness. Although numerous pollutants are mutagenic and carcinogenic, little attention has been given to exploring the extent to which adaptations displayed by organisms living in oncogenic environments could inspire novel cancer treatments, through mimicking the processes allowing these organisms to prevent or limit malignant progression. Building on a substantial knowledge base from the literature, we here present and discuss this progressive and promising research direction, advocating closer collaboration between the fields of medicine, ecology, and evolution in the war against cancer.
野外研究和实验进化研究均已表明,自然或人工暴露于环境致癌因素的生物体有时能够迅速进化出特定的适应性,以应对污染物及其对健康的不利影响。尽管许多污染物具有致突变性和致癌性,但对于生活在致癌环境中的生物体所表现出的适应性在多大程度上能够通过模拟使这些生物体预防或限制恶性进展的过程来启发新型癌症治疗方法,人们关注甚少。基于文献中的大量知识基础,我们在此介绍并讨论这一具有前瞻性和前景的研究方向,倡导医学、生态学和进化领域在抗癌斗争中加强更紧密的合作。