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Tumor predisposition and cancer syndromes as models to study gene X environment interactions

Authors :
David Malkin
Giovanni Gaudino
John H.J. Petrini
James E. Cleaver
Webster K. Cavenee
Bruce Beutler
Angela Bononi
Haining Yang
Tak W. Mak
Elizabeth P. Henske
William D. Foulkes
Carlo M. Croce
Michele Carbone
Sarah T. Arron
Paul M. Hwang
Alan D. D'Andrea
Ian D. Hickson
Richard D. Kolodner
Flavia Novelli
Raymond J. Monnat
Laura S. Schmidt
Joanna L. Groden
Harvey I. Pass
Source :
Nat Rev Cancer
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Cell division and organismal development are exquisitely orchestrated and regulated processes. The dysregulation of the molecular mechanisms underlying these processes may cause cancer, a consequence of cell-intrinsic and/or cell-extrinsic events. Cellular DNA can be damaged by spontaneous hydrolysis, reactive oxygen species, aberrant cellular metabolism, or other perturbations that cause DNA damage. Moreover, several environmental factors may damage the DNA, alter cellular metabolism, or affect the ability of cells to interact with their microenvironment. While some environmental factors are well established as carcinogens, there remains a large knowledge gap of others owing to the difficulty in identifying them because of the typically long interval between carcinogen exposure and cancer diagnosis. DNA damage increases in cells harboring mutations that impair their ability to correctly repair the DNA. Tumor predisposition syndromes in which cancers arise at an accelerated rate and in different organs - the equivalent of a sensitized background - provide a unique opportunity to examine how gene–environment interactions (GxE) influence cancer risk when the initiating genetic defect responsible for malignancy is known. Understanding the molecular processes that are altered by specific germline mutations, environmental exposures and related mechanisms that promote cancer, will allow the design of novel and effective preventive and therapeutic strategies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nat Rev Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e32f299b476a1db02b8094a963df6d3b