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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38328163

RESUMO

Tissues achieve and maintain their sizes through active feedback, whereby cells collectively regulate proliferation and differentiation so as to facilitate homeostasis and the ability to respond to disturbances. One of the best understood feedback mechanisms-renewal control-achieves remarkable feats of robustness in determining and maintaining desired sizes. Yet in a variety of biologically relevant situations, we show that stochastic effects should cause rare but catastrophic failures of renewal control. We define the circumstances under which this occurs and raise the possibility such events account for important non-genetic steps in the development of cancer. We further suggest that the spontaneous stochastic reversal of these events could explain cases of cancer normalization or dormancy following treatment. Indeed, we show that the kinetics of post-treatment recurrence for many cancers are often better fit by a model of stochastic re-emergence due to loss of collective proliferative control, than by deterministic models of cancer relapse.

2.
Elife ; 92020 10 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33047672

RESUMO

Mutational activation of the BRAF proto-oncogene in melanocytes reliably produces benign nevi (pigmented 'moles'), yet the same change is the most common driver mutation in melanoma. The reason nevi stop growing, and do not progress to melanoma, is widely attributed to a cell-autonomous process of 'oncogene-induced senescence'. Using a mouse model of Braf-driven nevus formation, analyzing both proliferative dynamics and single-cell gene expression, we found no evidence that nevus cells are senescent, either compared with other skin cells, or other melanocytes. We also found that nevus size distributions could not be fit by any simple cell-autonomous model of growth arrest, yet were easily fit by models based on collective cell behavior, for example in which arresting cells release an arrest-promoting factor. We suggest that nevus growth arrest is more likely related to the cell interactions that mediate size control in normal tissues, than to any cell-autonomous, 'oncogene-induced' program of senescence.


Melanocytes are pigment-producing cells found throughout the skin. Mutations that activate a gene called BRAF cause these cells to divide and produce melanocytic nevi, also known as "moles". These mutations are oncogenic, meaning they can cause cancer. Indeed, BRAF is the most commonly mutated gene in melanoma, a deadly skin cancer that arises from melanocytes. Yet, moles hardly ever progress to melanoma. A proposed explanation for this behavior is that, once activated, BRAF initiates a process called "oncogene-induced senescence" in each melanocyte. This process, likened to premature aging, is thought to be what causes cells in a mole to quit dividing. Although this hypothesis is widely accepted, it has proved difficult to test directly. To investigate this notion, Ruiz-Vega et al. studied mice with hundreds of moles created by the same BRAF mutation found in human moles. Analyzing the activity of genes in individual cells revealed that nevus melanocytes that have stopped growing are no more senescent than other skin cells, including non-mole melanocytes. Ruiz-Vega et al. then analyzed the sizes at which moles stopped growing, estimating the number of cells in each mole. The data were then compared with the results of a simulation and mathematical modeling. This revealed that any model based on the idea of cells independently shutting down after a number of random events could not reproduce the distribution of mole sizes that had been experimentally observed. On the other hand, models based on melanocytes acting collectively to shut down each other's growth fit the observed data much better. These findings suggest that moles do not stop growing as a direct result of the activation of BRAF, but because they sense and respond to their own overgrowth. The same kind of collective sensing is observed in normal tissues that maintain a constant size. Discovering that melanocytes do this not only sheds light on why moles stop growing, it could also help researchers devise new ways to prevent melanomas from forming.


Assuntos
Comunicação Celular , Melanócitos/metabolismo , Nevo Pigmentado/genética , Animais , Camundongos , Nevo , Proto-Oncogene Mas , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas B-raf/genética , Proteínas Proto-Oncogênicas B-raf/metabolismo
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