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Stress May Prompt Tumor Formation

Yale University (US) team finds that stress -- in the form of physical stress, emotional stress, infections, inflammation, and more u2013 may induce signals that cause cells to develop into tumors.

Until now, most researchers believed that more than one cancer-causing mutation needed to take place in a single cell in order for tumors to grow. Tian Xu, from Yale University (Connecticut, USA), and colleagues have discovered that cancer-causing mutations can cooperate to promote tumor development even when they are located in different cells within a tissue. The researchers  used a fruit fly model to study the activity of two genes known to be involved in development of human cancers: a gene called RAS that has been implicated in 30% of cancers, and a tumor-suppressing gene called scribble, which contributes to tumor development when mutated.  While neither a mutated RAS nor the defective scribble alone can cause cancer, this research team previously showed that a combination of the two within the same cell could trigger malignant tumors.   In the current study, the team found that these mutations did not have to co-exist in the same cell to cause tumors. A cell with only mutant RAS can develop into a malignant tumor if helped by a nearby cell with defective scribble. They also found stress conditions such as a wound could trigger cancer formation. Underlying both phenomena the researchers identified a signaling process called JNK, which is activated by environmental stress conditions. 

Ming Wu, Jose Carlos Pastor-Pareja, Tian Xu.  “Interaction between RasV12 and scribbled clones induces tumour growth and invasion.” Nature (13 January 2010) doi:10.1038/nature08702.

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