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Enhanced risk of cancer in companion animals as a response to the longevity

Veterinary Science

Enhanced risk of cancer in companion animals as a response to the longevity

M. Tanaka, S. Yamaguchi, et al.

This groundbreaking study by Moeko Tanaka, Sachi Yamaguchi, and Yoh Iwasa delves into the surprising connection between increased longevity in companion animals and elevated cancer risks. Through a multi-step cancer model, it reveals how environmental advancements may heighten cancer prevalence initially, while evolutionary responses might eventually reduce genomic error rates. Discover the intricate dynamics between short-term challenges and long-term adaptations in the face of changing environments!

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Cancer arises from lifetime accumulation of somatic genomic and epigenomic alterations occurring at very low error rates during replication. Long-lived species (e.g., elephants) appear to have evolved mechanisms that slow cancer progression. Recently, improved environments have extended the lifespan of companion dogs and increased the fraction developing cancer, suggesting short-term responses of cancer risk to longevity differ from long-term evolutionary responses. Using a simple multi-step model of cancer in which event rates toward malignancy scale with the genomic replication error rate x, we show that perfect error removal is too costly, leading to evolution of a positive error rate. When the environment suddenly improves (lower noncancer mortality), the relative importance of cancer increases even though age-specific cancer risk is unchanged. Over many generations, x evolves downward, mitigating cancer risk.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Nov 11, 2020
Authors
Moeko Tanaka, Sachi Yamaguchi, Yoh Iwasa
Tags
cancer risk
companion animals
longevity
environmental improvements
genomic error rates
evolution
multi-step model
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