Cargando…

The Chromosomal Basis of Cancer

Conventional genetic theories have failed to explain why cancer (1) is not heritable and thus extremely rare in newborns, (2) is caused by non-mutagenic carcinogens, (3) develops only years to decades after initiation by carcinogens, (4) follows pre-neoplastic aneuploidy, (5) is aneuploid, (6) is ch...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Duesberg, Peter, Li, Ruhong, Fabarius, Alice, Hehlmann, Ruediger
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: IOS Press 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4615177/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16373963
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2005/951598
_version_ 1782396466849906688
author Duesberg, Peter
Li, Ruhong
Fabarius, Alice
Hehlmann, Ruediger
author_facet Duesberg, Peter
Li, Ruhong
Fabarius, Alice
Hehlmann, Ruediger
author_sort Duesberg, Peter
collection PubMed
description Conventional genetic theories have failed to explain why cancer (1) is not heritable and thus extremely rare in newborns, (2) is caused by non-mutagenic carcinogens, (3) develops only years to decades after initiation by carcinogens, (4) follows pre-neoplastic aneuploidy, (5) is aneuploid, (6) is chromosomally and phenotypically “unstable”, (7) carries specific aneusomies, (8) generates much more complex phenotypes than conventional mutation such as multidrug resistance, (9) generates nonselective phenotypes such as metastasis (no benefit at native site) and “immortality” (not necessary for tumorigenesis), and (10) does not contain carcinogenic mutations. We propose, instead, that cancer is a chromosomal disease. Accordingly carcinogenesis is initiated by random aneuploidies, which are induced by carcinogens or spontaneously. Since aneuploidy unbalances 1000s of genes, it corrupts teams of proteins that segregate, synthesize and repair chromosomes. Aneuploidy is therefore a steady source of chromosomal variations from which, in classical Darwinian terms, selection encourages the evolution and malignant progression of cancer cells. The rates of specific chromosomal variations can exceed conventional mutations by 4–11 orders of magnitude, depending on the degrees of aneuploidy. Based on their chromosomal constitution cancer cells are new cell “species” with specific aneusomies, but unstable karyotypes. The cancer-specific aneusomies generate complex, malignant phenotypes through the abnormal dosages of 1000s of genes, just as trisomy 21 generates Down syndrome. In sum, cancer is caused by chromosomal disorganization, which increases karyotypic entropy. Thus, cancer is a chromosomal rather than a genetic disease. The chromosomal theory explains (1) non-heritable cancer because aneuploidy is not heritable, (2) non-mutagenic carcinogens as aneuploidogens, (3) long neoplastic latencies by the low probability of evolving new species, (4) nonselective phenotypes via genes hitchhiking with selective chromosomes, and (5) immortality because, through their cellular heterogeneity, cancers survive negative mutations and cytotoxic drugs via resistant subspecies.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4615177
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2005
publisher IOS Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-46151772016-01-12 The Chromosomal Basis of Cancer Duesberg, Peter Li, Ruhong Fabarius, Alice Hehlmann, Ruediger Cell Oncol Opinion Conventional genetic theories have failed to explain why cancer (1) is not heritable and thus extremely rare in newborns, (2) is caused by non-mutagenic carcinogens, (3) develops only years to decades after initiation by carcinogens, (4) follows pre-neoplastic aneuploidy, (5) is aneuploid, (6) is chromosomally and phenotypically “unstable”, (7) carries specific aneusomies, (8) generates much more complex phenotypes than conventional mutation such as multidrug resistance, (9) generates nonselective phenotypes such as metastasis (no benefit at native site) and “immortality” (not necessary for tumorigenesis), and (10) does not contain carcinogenic mutations. We propose, instead, that cancer is a chromosomal disease. Accordingly carcinogenesis is initiated by random aneuploidies, which are induced by carcinogens or spontaneously. Since aneuploidy unbalances 1000s of genes, it corrupts teams of proteins that segregate, synthesize and repair chromosomes. Aneuploidy is therefore a steady source of chromosomal variations from which, in classical Darwinian terms, selection encourages the evolution and malignant progression of cancer cells. The rates of specific chromosomal variations can exceed conventional mutations by 4–11 orders of magnitude, depending on the degrees of aneuploidy. Based on their chromosomal constitution cancer cells are new cell “species” with specific aneusomies, but unstable karyotypes. The cancer-specific aneusomies generate complex, malignant phenotypes through the abnormal dosages of 1000s of genes, just as trisomy 21 generates Down syndrome. In sum, cancer is caused by chromosomal disorganization, which increases karyotypic entropy. Thus, cancer is a chromosomal rather than a genetic disease. The chromosomal theory explains (1) non-heritable cancer because aneuploidy is not heritable, (2) non-mutagenic carcinogens as aneuploidogens, (3) long neoplastic latencies by the low probability of evolving new species, (4) nonselective phenotypes via genes hitchhiking with selective chromosomes, and (5) immortality because, through their cellular heterogeneity, cancers survive negative mutations and cytotoxic drugs via resistant subspecies. IOS Press 2005 2005-12-22 /pmc/articles/PMC4615177/ /pubmed/16373963 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2005/951598 Text en Copyright © 2005 Hindawi Publishing Corporation and the authors.
spellingShingle Opinion
Duesberg, Peter
Li, Ruhong
Fabarius, Alice
Hehlmann, Ruediger
The Chromosomal Basis of Cancer
title The Chromosomal Basis of Cancer
title_full The Chromosomal Basis of Cancer
title_fullStr The Chromosomal Basis of Cancer
title_full_unstemmed The Chromosomal Basis of Cancer
title_short The Chromosomal Basis of Cancer
title_sort chromosomal basis of cancer
topic Opinion
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4615177/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16373963
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2005/951598
work_keys_str_mv AT duesbergpeter thechromosomalbasisofcancer
AT liruhong thechromosomalbasisofcancer
AT fabariusalice thechromosomalbasisofcancer
AT hehlmannruediger thechromosomalbasisofcancer
AT duesbergpeter chromosomalbasisofcancer
AT liruhong chromosomalbasisofcancer
AT fabariusalice chromosomalbasisofcancer
AT hehlmannruediger chromosomalbasisofcancer