Cancer causing variants: Fit or unfit?
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8.5 years ago
MAPK ★ 2.1k

I am confused with the concept of fittest genetic variants particularly in the case of cancer genome. If the variants that allow cancer cells to respond and grow well in the tumour micro-environment, do we not call them fit variants? They are fit because they allow cancer cells to survive, but are unfit because those cells are not fit for the host itself. Can someone please clarify this conundrum?

Genetic variants • 1.4k views
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8.5 years ago
Michael 55k

I think that depends on the point of view. If you take the view of the cancer cells it might seem that they are more fit to survive inside the whole organism. However, cancer cells don't procreate, thereby their mutated genotype is unable to pass on to next generation anyway, and therefore they do not have a fitness in their own right. If they in effect kill their organism, the metazoan organism will be less fit to pass on its genotype to the next generation.

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8.5 years ago

Yes, Michael makes the key distinction here, between fitness of the organism and the fitness of a particular cancer cell. If a cell survives better and has more progeny than other cells in the tumor, then it has increased fitness, in terms of the cancer. In traditional evolutionary biology terms, though, if a cancer susceptibility allele does not affect the organism's reproductive potential, then it has no affect on fitness.

BRCA2 mutations predispose people to cancer, but that cancer doesn't typically kick in until later in life, often post-menopause. So even though it shortens the lifespan of the individual, it doesn't have much effect on reproductive fitness, which is why it persists in the population.

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