Increased risk of cancer in dogs and humans: A consequence of recent extension of lifespan beyond evolutionarily determined limitations?

Aaron L. Sarver, Kelly M. Makielski, Taylor A. DePauw, Ashley J. Schulte, Jaime F. Modiano
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

Cancer is among the most common causes of death for dogs (and cats) and humans in the developed world, even though it is uncommon in wildlife and other domestic animals. We provide a rationale for this observation based on recent advances in our understanding of the evolutionary basis of cancer. Over the course of evolutionary time, species have acquired and fine-tuned adaptive cancer-protective mechanisms that are intrinsically related to their energy demands, reproductive strategies, and expected lifespan. These cancer-protective mechanisms are general across species and/or specific to each species and their niche, and they do not seem to be limited in diversity. The evolutionarily acquired cancer-free longevity that defines a species’ life history can explain why the relative cancer risk, rate, and incidence are largely similar across most species in the animal kingdom despite differences in body size and life expectancy. The molecular, cellular, and metabolic events that promote malignant transformation and cancerous growth can overcome these adaptive, species-specific protective mechanisms in a small proportion of individuals, while independently, some individuals in the population might achieve exceptional longevity. In dogs and humans, recent dramatic alterations in healthcare and social structures have allowed increasing numbers of individuals in both species to far exceed their species-adapted longevities (by two to four times) without allowing the time necessary for compensatory natural selection. In other words, the cancer-protective mechanisms that restrain risk at comparable levels to other species for their adapted lifespan are incapable of providing cancer protection over this recent, drastic, and widespread increase in longevity.

Abstract Image

狗和人类癌症风险增加:最近寿命延长超出进化决定的限制的结果?
在发达国家,癌症是狗(和猫)和人类最常见的死亡原因之一,尽管它在野生动物和其他家畜中并不常见。基于我们对癌症进化基础的理解的最新进展,我们为这一观察提供了一个基本原理。在进化的过程中,物种已经获得并微调了与它们的能量需求、繁殖策略和预期寿命内在相关的适应性癌症保护机制。这些癌症保护机制是跨物种和/或特定于每个物种及其生态位的,它们似乎不受多样性的限制。进化获得的无癌寿命定义了一个物种的生活史,可以解释为什么尽管体型和预期寿命不同,动物王国中大多数物种的相对癌症风险、发病率和发病率在很大程度上是相似的。促进恶性转化和癌性生长的分子、细胞和代谢事件可以在一小部分个体中克服这些适应性的、物种特异性的保护机制,而独立地,群体中的一些个体可能会获得超长的寿命。在狗和人类中,最近医疗保健和社会结构的巨大变化使得这两个物种的个体数量远远超过了它们的物种适应寿命(两到四倍),而没有给补偿性自然选择提供必要的时间。换句话说,与其他物种相比,在适应寿命的情况下,癌症保护机制将风险控制在相当水平上,但在最近这种急剧而广泛的寿命增长中,这种机制无法提供癌症保护。
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