Exposomal determinants of non-genetic plasticity in tumor initiation.

IF 14.3 1区 医学 Q1 ONCOLOGY
Davide Carra, Silvana C E Maas, Jose A Seoane, Direna Alonso-Curbelo
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The classical view of cancer as a genetically driven disease has been challenged by recent findings of oncogenic mutations in phenotypically healthy tissues, refocusing attention on non-genetic mechanisms of tumor initiation. In this context, gene-environment interactions take the stage, with recent studies showing how they unleash and redirect cellular and tissue plasticity towards protumorigenic states in response to the exposome, the ensemble of environmental factors impinging on tissue homeostasis. We conceptualize tumor-initiating plasticity as a phenotype-transforming force acting at three levels: cell-intrinsic, focusing on mutant epithelial cells' responses to environmental variation; reprogramming of non-neoplastic cells of the host, leading to protumor micro- and macroenvironments; and microbiome ecosystem dynamics. This perspective highlights cell, tissue, and organismal plasticity mechanisms underlying tumor initiation that are shaped by the exposome, and how their functional investigation may provide new opportunities to prevent, detect, and intercept cancer-promoting plasticity.

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来源期刊
Trends in cancer
Trends in cancer Medicine-Oncology
CiteScore
28.50
自引率
0.50%
发文量
138
期刊介绍: Trends in Cancer, a part of the Trends review journals, delivers concise and engaging expert commentary on key research topics and cutting-edge advances in cancer discovery and medicine. Trends in Cancer serves as a unique platform for multidisciplinary information, fostering discussion and education for scientists, clinicians, policy makers, and patients & advocates.Covering various aspects, it presents opportunities, challenges, and impacts of basic, translational, and clinical findings, industry R&D, technology, innovation, ethics, and cancer policy and funding in an authoritative yet reader-friendly format.
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