Giersch Rachael M, Hart Samuel F M, Reddy Satyatejas G, Yonemitsu Marisa A, Orellana Rosales María J, Korn Madelyn, Geleta Brook M, Countway Peter D, Fernández Robledo José A, Metzger Michael J
Pacific Northwest Research Institute, Seattle, WA 98122, USA.
Molecular and Cellular Biology Program, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Pathogens. 2022 Feb 23;11(3):283. doi: 10.3390/pathogens11030283.
Many pathogens can cause cancer, but cancer itself does not normally act as an infectious agent. However, transmissible cancers have been found in a few cases in nature: in Tasmanian devils, dogs, and several bivalve species. The transmissible cancers in dogs and devils are known to spread through direct physical contact, but the exact route of transmission of bivalve transmissible neoplasia (BTN) has not yet been confirmed. It has been hypothesized that cancer cells from bivalves could be released by diseased animals and spread through the water column to infect/engraft into other animals. To test the feasibility of this proposed mechanism of transmission, we tested the ability of BTN cells from the soft-shell clam ( BTN, or MarBTN) to survive in artificial seawater. We found that MarBTN cells are highly sensitive to salinity, with acute toxicity at salinity levels lower than those found in the native marine environment. BTN cells also survive longer at lower temperatures, with 50% of cells surviving greater than 12 days in seawater at 10 °C, and more than 19 days at 4 °C. With one clam donor, living cells were observed for more than eight weeks at 4 °C. We also used qPCR of environmental DNA (eDNA) to detect the presence of MarBTN-specific DNA in the environment. We observed release of MarBTN-specific DNA into the water of laboratory aquaria containing highly MarBTN-diseased clams, and we detected MarBTN-specific DNA in seawater samples collected from MarBTN-endemic areas in Maine, although the copy numbers detected in environmental samples were much lower than those found in aquaria. Overall, these data show that MarBTN cells can survive well in seawater, and they are released into the water by diseased animals. These findings support the hypothesis that BTN is spread from animal-to-animal by free cells through seawater.
许多病原体可引发癌症,但癌症本身通常并不作为感染源。然而,自然界中已在少数案例中发现了可传播的癌症:袋獾、狗以及几种双壳贝类物种。已知狗和袋獾身上的可传播癌症是通过直接身体接触传播的,但双壳贝类可传播肿瘤(BTN)的确切传播途径尚未得到证实。有假说认为,患病双壳贝类的癌细胞可能会被释放出来,并通过水柱传播以感染/植入其他动物体内。为了测试这一提出的传播机制的可行性,我们检测了软壳蛤的BTN细胞(BTN,或MarBTN)在人工海水中存活的能力。我们发现MarBTN细胞对盐度高度敏感,在盐度水平低于原生海洋环境中的盐度时会产生急性毒性。BTN细胞在较低温度下也能存活更长时间,50%的细胞在10℃的海水中存活超过12天,在4℃时存活超过19天。使用一个蛤捐赠者,在4℃下观察到活细胞存活了超过八周。我们还使用环境DNA(eDNA)的qPCR来检测环境中MarBTN特异性DNA的存在。我们观察到MarBTN特异性DNA释放到含有高度感染MarBTN的蛤的实验室水族箱的水中,并且我们在从缅因州MarBTN流行地区采集的海水样本中检测到了MarBTN特异性DNA,尽管在环境样本中检测到的拷贝数远低于在水族箱中发现的拷贝数。总体而言,这些数据表明MarBTN细胞能够在海水中良好存活,并且它们会被患病动物释放到水中。这些发现支持了BTN通过游离细胞在海水中从动物传播到动物的假说。