학술논문

A single clonal lineage of transmissible cancer identified in two marine mussel species in South America and Europe
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Ecology
Genetics
Oncology and Carcinogenesis
Cancer
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Alleles
Animals
Aquatic Organisms
Europe
Mytilus
Neoplasms
Phylogeny
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide
Sequence Analysis
DNA
South America
Mytilus chilensis
Mytilus edulis
bivalve
bivalve transmissible neoplasia
cancer biology
infectious disease
microbiology
transmissible cancer
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Biological sciences
Biomedical and clinical sciences
Health sciences
Language
Abstract
Transmissible cancers, in which cancer cells themselves act as an infectious agent, have been identified in Tasmanian devils, dogs, and four bivalves. We investigated a disseminated neoplasia affecting geographically distant populations of two species of mussels (Mytilus chilensis in South America and M. edulis in Europe). Sequencing alleles from four loci (two nuclear and two mitochondrial) provided evidence of transmissible cancer in both species. Phylogenetic analysis of cancer-associated alleles and analysis of diagnostic SNPs showed that cancers in both species likely arose in a third species of mussel (M. trossulus), but these cancer cells are independent from the previously identified transmissible cancer in M. trossulus from Canada. Unexpectedly, cancers from M. chilensis and M. edulis are nearly identical, showing that the same cancer lineage affects both. Thus, a single transmissible cancer lineage has crossed into two new host species and has been transferred across the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans and between the Northern and Southern hemispheres.