4.6 Review

Pleiotropic effects of cell competition between normal and transformed cells in mammalian cancers

Journal

JOURNAL OF CANCER RESEARCH AND CLINICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 149, Issue 4, Pages 1607-1619

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00432-022-04143-6

Keywords

Cell competition; Cancer development; Fitness fingerprint; EDAC; Myc

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This study summarizes the current knowledge about the roles and mechanisms of different cell competition interactions between host normal cells and transformed cells involved in mammalian tumor development. These interactions play important roles in different phases of tumor progression, and understanding their molecular mechanisms can provide novel ideas for cancer prevention and treatment.
Purpose In the course of tumor progression, cancer clones interact with host normal cells, and these interactions make them under selection pressure all the time. Cell competition, which can eliminate suboptimal cells and optimize organ development via comparison of cell fitness information, is found to take place between host cells and transformed cells in mammals and play important roles in different phases of tumor progression. The aim of this study is to summarize the current knowledge about the roles and corresponding mechanisms of different cell competition interactions between host normal cells and transformed cells involved in mammalian tumor development. Methods We reviewed the published relevant articles in the Pubmed. Results So far, the role of several cell competition interactions have been well described in the different phases of mammalian tumor genesis and development. While cell competitions for trophic factors and epithelial defense against cancer (EDAC) prevent the emergence of transformed cells and suppress carcinogenesis, fitness-fingerprints-comparison system and Myc supercompetitors promote the local expansion of transformed cells after the early tumor lesion is formatted. In addition, various preclinical tumor-suppression models which based on the molecular mechanisms of these competition interactions show potential clinical value of boosting the fitness of host normal cells. Conclusion Cell competition between host and transformed cells has pleiotropic effects in mammalian tumor genesis and development. The clarification of specific molecular mechanisms shed light on novel ideas for the prevention and treatment of cancer.

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