Litcius/Paper detail

Cell competition and cancer from Drosophila to mammals

Bojie Cong, Ross Cagan

2024Oncogenesis24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Throughout an individual's life, somatic cells acquire cancer-associated mutations. A fraction of these mutations trigger tumour formation, a phenomenon partly driven by the interplay of mutant and wild-type cell clones competing for dominance; conversely, other mutations function against tumour initiation. This mechanism of 'cell competition', can shift clone dynamics by evaluating the relative status of clonal populations, promoting 'winners' and eliminating 'losers'. This review examines the role of cell competition in the context of tumorigenesis, tumour progression and therapeutic intervention.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySomatic cellContext (archaeology)Carcinogenesisclone (Java method)Dominance (genetics)GeneticsMutantCancerMutationCompetition (biology)CellEvolutionary biologyCancer researchGeneEcologyPaleontologyHippo pathway signaling and YAP/TAZCancer Genomics and DiagnosticsMathematical Biology Tumor Growth