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Cancer is usually presented as a problem of cells becoming mindless replicators, proliferating without purpose or restraint. But that image underestimates the foe, according to a new paper. The authors argue that weââ¬â¢ll stand a better chance of combating cancer if we recognise that tumour cells are a lot smarter and function like a co-operating community.
One of the authors, physicist Eshel Ben-Jacob of Tel Aviv University in Israel, has argued for some time that many single-celled organisms, whether they are tumour cells or gut bacteria, show a rudimentary form of social intelligence ââ¬â an ability to act collectively in ways that adapt to the prevailing conditions, learn from experience and solve problems, all with the ââ¬Åaimââ¬Â of improving their chances of survival. He even believes there is evidence that they can modify their own genomes in beneficial ways.
Some of these ideas are controversial, but others are undeniable. One of the classic examples of a single-celled co-operator, the soil-dwelling slime mould Dictyostelium discoideum, survives a lack of warmth or moisture by sending out pulses of a chemical from cells, which attracts other cells to move towards them and clump together into multi-celled bodies that look like weird mushrooms. Some of these cells become spores, entering into a kind of suspended animation until conditions improve.
Many bacteria can engage in similar feats of communication and coordination, which can produce complex colony shapes such as vortex-like circulating blobs or exotic branching patterns. These displays of ââ¬Åsocial intelligenceââ¬Â help the colonies survive adversity, sometimes to our cost. Biofilms, for example ââ¬â robust, slimy surface coatings that harbour bacteria and can spread infection in hospitals ââ¬â are manufactured through the co-operation of several different species.
But as cyberwarfare experts know, disrupting communications can be deadly, and the same social intelligence that helps bacteria thrive can be manipulated to attack pathogenic varieties. Some strategies for tackling dangerous bacteria now target their cell-to-cell communications, for example by introducing false signals that might induce cells to eat one another or to dissolve biofilms. So it pays to know what theyââ¬â¢re saying to one another.
Ben-Jacob, along with Donald Coffey of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore and ââ¬Åbiological physicistââ¬Â Herbert Levine of Rice University in Houston, Texas, think that we should be approaching cancer therapy this way too: not by aiming to kill off tumour cells with lethal doses of poisons or radiation, but by interrupting their conversations.
Cracking codes
There are several indications that cancer cells thrive by co-operating. One trick that bacteria use for invading new territory, including other organisms, is to use a mode of cell-to-cell communication called quorum sensing to determine how densely populated their colony is: above a certain threshold, they might have sufficient strength in numbers to form biofilms, or infect a host. Researchers have suggested that this process is similar to the way cancer cells spread during metastasis. Others think that group behaviour of cancer cells might explain why they can become so quickly resistant to drugs.
Cancer cells are very different from bacteria: they are rogue human cells, which have a separate compartment for the genetic material, and are generally deemed a more advanced type of cell than ââ¬Åprimitiveââ¬Â bacteria, in which the chromosomes are just mixed up with everything else. Yet itââ¬â¢s been suggested that, when our cells turn cancerous and the normal processes regulating their growth break down, more primitive ââ¬Åsingle-celledââ¬Â styles of behaviour are unleashed.
Primitive perhaps ââ¬â but still terrifyingly smart. Tumours can trick the body into making new blood vessels to nourish them. They can enslave healthy cells and turn them into decoys to evade the immune system. They seem even able to fool the immune system into helping the cancer to develop. Itââ¬â¢s still not clear exactly how they do some of these things. The anthropomorphism that makes cancer cells evil enemies to be ââ¬Åfoughtââ¬Â risks distorting the challenge, but itââ¬â¢s not hard to see why researchers succumb to it.
Cancer cells resistant to drugs can and do emerge at random by natural selection in a population. But they may also have tricks that speed up mutation and boost the chances of resistant strains appearing. And they seem able to generate dormant, spore-like forms, as Dictyostelium discoideum does, that produce ââ¬Åtime-bombââ¬Â relapses even after cancer traces have disappeared in scans and blood tests.
So whatââ¬â¢s to be done? Ben-Jacob and colleagues say that if we can crack the code of how cancer cells communicate, we might be able to subvert it. These cells seem to exchange chemical signals, including short strands of the nucleic acid RNA which is known to control genes. They can even genetically modify and reprogramme healthy cells by dispatching segments of DNA. The researchers think that it might be possible to turn this crosstalk of tumour cells against them, inducing the cells to die or split apart spontaneously.
Meanwhile, if we can figure out what triggers the ââ¬Åawakeningââ¬Â of dormant cancer cells, they might be tricked into revealing themselves at the wrong time, after the immune system has been boosted to destroy them in their vulnerable, newly aroused state. Ben-Jacob and colleagues suggest experiments that could probe how this switch from dormant to active cells comes about. Beyond this, perhaps we might commandeer harmless or even indigenous bacteria to act as spies and agent provocateurs, using their proven smartness to outwit and undermine that of cancer cells.
The ââ¬Åwarfareââ¬Â analogy in cancer treatment is widely overplayed and potentially misleading, but in this case it has some value. It is often said that the nature of war has changed over the past several decades: itââ¬â¢s no longer about armies, superior firepower, and battlefield strategy, but about grappling with a more diffuse foe ââ¬â indeed one loosely organized into ââ¬Åcellsââ¬Â ââ¬â by identifying and undermining channels of recruitment, communication and interaction. If it means anything to talk of a ââ¬Åwar on cancerââ¬Â, then perhaps here too we need to think about warfare in this new way.
Source: http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20121012-combating-cancers-conversations
I didn't think cells were that devious... o.o