Contagious
cancers may not be as rare as thought, say scientists who
have discovered a second transmissible cancer in Tasmanian devils -
small dog-sized ferocious carnivores found in the Australian island
state of Tasmania.
Transmissible cancers -
cancers which can spread between individuals by the transfer of
living cancer cells - are believed to arise extremely rarely in
nature.
One of the few known
transmissible cancers causes facial tumours in Tasmanian devils, and
is threatening this species with extinction.
The discovery by
researchers from the University of Tasmania in Australia, and the
University of Cambridge in UK, calls into question our current
understanding of the processes that drive cancers to become
transmissible.
Tasmanian devils are
iconic marsupial carnivores that are only found in the wild in
Tasmania. The size of a small dog, the animals have a reputation for
ferocity as they frequently bite each other during mating and feeding
interactions.
In 1996, researchers
observed Tasmanian devils in the north-east of the island with
tumours affecting the face and mouth; soon it was discovered that
these tumours were contagious between devils, spread by biting.
The cancer spreads
rapidly throughout the animal's body and the disease usually causes
the death of affected animals within months of the appearance of
symptoms.
The cancer has since
spread through most of Tasmania and has triggered widespread devil
population declines.
To date, only two other
forms of transmissible cancer have been observed in nature - in dogs
and in soft-shell clams.
Cancer normally occurs
when cells in the body start to proliferate uncontrollably. However,
cancers do not usually survive beyond the body of the host from whose
cells they originally derived.
"The second cancer
causes tumours on the face that are outwardly indistinguishable from
the previously-discovered cancer," said first author Ruth Pye,
from the University of Tasmania.
"So far it has been
detected in eight devils in the south-east of Tasmania," Pye
said.
"Until now, we've
always thought that transmissible cancers arise extremely rarely in
nature, but this new discovery makes us question this belief,"
said senior author Elizabeth Murchison from the University of
Cambridge.
The discovery of the
second transmissible cancer began in 2014, when a devil with facial
tumours was found in south-east Tasmania.
Although this animal's
tumours were outwardly very similar to those caused by the
first-described Tasmanian devil transmissible cancer, the scientists
found that this devil's cancer carried different chromosomal
rearrangements and was genetically distinct.
Since then, eight
additional animals have been found with the new cancer in the same
area of south-east Tasmania.
The study was published
in the journal PNAS.
Article Source: Business
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