Publication:
Possible mechanisms of transmissible cancers in tasmanian devils

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Publication Date

2017

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English

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Journal Article

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Abstract

Physical transfer of viable tumor cells from one organism to another is known as transmissible cancer, which is observed in dogs, Tasmanian devils, Syrian hamsters, and some soft-shell clams. Tasmanian devil facial tumor disease is transmitted like an infectious disease between individuals through biting and other close contact. This extinction type is quite different from the other extinction types such as ecological factors. Transmissible cancers' cellular metabolism is also different from the both normal cellular metabolism and other types of cancers' metabolism. The lack of an immune response against the Tasmanian devil facial tumor cells is the one of the key points in the transmission of the cancerous cells. The differentiated cellular metabolism and absence of immune reaction may be due to the organisms' enzymes. Cells may have altered surface proteins by altering enzymatic activities that cannot be recognized by both the innate and adaptive responses. The promiscuity of the key enzymes may be associated with unwanted side effects, such as cannot recognize molecular patterns on the transmitted cell or hypomethylation of DNA by altering catalytic properties enzymes or altered matrix metalloproteinases or cathelicidins.

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Source:

Turkish Journal of Biochemistry-Turk Biyokimya Dergisi

Publisher:

Walter De Gruyter Gmbh

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Biochemistry, Molecular biology

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