Resolving Peto's paradox: Modeling the potential effects of size-related metabolic changes, and of the evolution of immune policing and cancer suppression.

The intrinsic risk of cancer increases with body size and longevity; however, big long-lived species do not exhibit this increase, a contradiction named Peto's paradox. Five hypotheses potentially resolving this paradox were modeled using the multistage model of carcinogenesis. The five hypothe...

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Main Author: Nunney, Leonard
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9wj2m5cm
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt9wj2m5cm 2023-05-15T15:45:10+02:00 Resolving Peto's paradox: Modeling the potential effects of size-related metabolic changes, and of the evolution of immune policing and cancer suppression. Nunney, Leonard 1581 - 1592 2020-08-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9wj2m5cm unknown eScholarship, University of California qt9wj2m5cm https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9wj2m5cm public Evolutionary applications, vol 13, iss 7 blue whale body size cancer cancer suppression elephant evolution immune policing multistage carcinogenesis somatic mutation Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry Evolutionary Biology Genetics article 2020 ftcdlib 2020-09-25T12:55:25Z The intrinsic risk of cancer increases with body size and longevity; however, big long-lived species do not exhibit this increase, a contradiction named Peto's paradox. Five hypotheses potentially resolving this paradox were modeled using the multistage model of carcinogenesis. The five hypotheses were based on (1) intrinsic changes in metabolic rate with body size; adaptive increase in immune policing of (2) cancer cells or (3) cells with driver mutations; or adaptive increase in cancer suppression via (4) decreased somatic mutation rate, or (5) increased genetic control. Parameter changes needed to stabilize cancer risk in three types of cancer were estimated for tissues scaled from mouse size and longevity to human and blue whale levels. The metabolic rate hypothesis alone was rejected due to a conflict between the required interspecific effect with the observed intraspecific effect of size on cancer risk, but some metabolic change was optionally incorporated in the other models. Necessary parameter changes in immune policing and somatic mutation rate far exceeded values observed; however, natural selection increasing the genetic suppression of cancer was generally consistent with data. Such adaptive increases in genetic control of cancers in large and/or long-lived animals raise the possibility that nonmodel animals will reveal novel anticancer mechanisms. Article in Journal/Newspaper Blue whale University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic blue whale
body size
cancer
cancer suppression
elephant
evolution
immune policing
multistage carcinogenesis
somatic mutation
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Evolutionary Biology
Genetics
spellingShingle blue whale
body size
cancer
cancer suppression
elephant
evolution
immune policing
multistage carcinogenesis
somatic mutation
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Evolutionary Biology
Genetics
Nunney, Leonard
Resolving Peto's paradox: Modeling the potential effects of size-related metabolic changes, and of the evolution of immune policing and cancer suppression.
topic_facet blue whale
body size
cancer
cancer suppression
elephant
evolution
immune policing
multistage carcinogenesis
somatic mutation
Medicinal and Biomolecular Chemistry
Evolutionary Biology
Genetics
description The intrinsic risk of cancer increases with body size and longevity; however, big long-lived species do not exhibit this increase, a contradiction named Peto's paradox. Five hypotheses potentially resolving this paradox were modeled using the multistage model of carcinogenesis. The five hypotheses were based on (1) intrinsic changes in metabolic rate with body size; adaptive increase in immune policing of (2) cancer cells or (3) cells with driver mutations; or adaptive increase in cancer suppression via (4) decreased somatic mutation rate, or (5) increased genetic control. Parameter changes needed to stabilize cancer risk in three types of cancer were estimated for tissues scaled from mouse size and longevity to human and blue whale levels. The metabolic rate hypothesis alone was rejected due to a conflict between the required interspecific effect with the observed intraspecific effect of size on cancer risk, but some metabolic change was optionally incorporated in the other models. Necessary parameter changes in immune policing and somatic mutation rate far exceeded values observed; however, natural selection increasing the genetic suppression of cancer was generally consistent with data. Such adaptive increases in genetic control of cancers in large and/or long-lived animals raise the possibility that nonmodel animals will reveal novel anticancer mechanisms.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Nunney, Leonard
author_facet Nunney, Leonard
author_sort Nunney, Leonard
title Resolving Peto's paradox: Modeling the potential effects of size-related metabolic changes, and of the evolution of immune policing and cancer suppression.
title_short Resolving Peto's paradox: Modeling the potential effects of size-related metabolic changes, and of the evolution of immune policing and cancer suppression.
title_full Resolving Peto's paradox: Modeling the potential effects of size-related metabolic changes, and of the evolution of immune policing and cancer suppression.
title_fullStr Resolving Peto's paradox: Modeling the potential effects of size-related metabolic changes, and of the evolution of immune policing and cancer suppression.
title_full_unstemmed Resolving Peto's paradox: Modeling the potential effects of size-related metabolic changes, and of the evolution of immune policing and cancer suppression.
title_sort resolving peto's paradox: modeling the potential effects of size-related metabolic changes, and of the evolution of immune policing and cancer suppression.
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2020
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9wj2m5cm
op_coverage 1581 - 1592
genre Blue whale
genre_facet Blue whale
op_source Evolutionary applications, vol 13, iss 7
op_relation qt9wj2m5cm
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9wj2m5cm
op_rights public
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