Skip to main content
European Commission logo
italiano italiano
CORDIS - Risultati della ricerca dell’UE
CORDIS
CORDIS Web 30th anniversary CORDIS Web 30th anniversary

Exploring the mechanisms of long-term tumour evolution and genomic instability in marine transmissible cancers

Descrizione del progetto

L’evoluzione del cancro attraverso la lente dei tumori trasmissibili

I tumori trasmissibili sono tumori che possono diffondersi nelle popolazioni attraverso il trasferimento di cellule tumorali vive tra gli animali. Mentre negli animali terrestri sono noti solo tre tumori di questo tipo, i bivalvi marini (tra cui vongole, cozze e cocchi) sono colpiti da almeno 10 tumori trasmissibili distinti, che si diffondono attraverso il trasferimento di cellule tumorali attraverso l’acqua. Il progetto CellFish, finanziato dal CER, si propone di indagare le origini e l’evoluzione dei tumori trasmissibili in mare attraverso uno studio genomico comparativo su larga scala, sfruttando un ampio campionamento di tumori in tutti i continenti e tecnologie come la microdissezione laser e il calcolo ad alte prestazioni. Poiché alcuni tumori trasmissibili possono sopravvivere per migliaia di anni, offrono un’opportunità unica per studiare la biologia e l’evoluzione del cancro, nonché i meccanismi e le conseguenze dell’instabilità genomica.

Obiettivo

Cancers are proliferative outgrowths of abnormal cells driven by a selfish evolutionary programme. Most cancers arise from and remain within the bodies of their respective host individuals. Rarely, however, cancers may escape their hosts to become ‘transmissible cancers’, infectious cell lineages that spread between individuals by direct transfer of cancer cells. As parasitic cancers capable of surviving for millennia, transmissible cancers offer a unique model for exploring how mutation, selection and cellular processes mould and constrain selfish tumour evolution.

Marine bivalves (shellfish including clams, mussels and cockles) are affected by at least 10 transmissible cancers, which spread via waterborne cell transfer. The recurrent emergence of long-lived cancers in shellfish provides a valuable resource for comparative studies aiming to probe the basic mechanisms of tumour evolution, including extreme genomic instability. Yet, the evolutionary histories of these cancers are poorly understood.

My vision is to elucidate the origins and evolution of marine transmissible cancers by conducting a large-scale comparative genomic study of these cancers. My aims are to:

1. Understand how transmissible cancers arise, mutate and spread under the sea

2. Identify the mechanisms and consequences of genomic instability in transmissible cancers.

My research approach will involve:

- Extensive tumour sampling across continents

- Generation of high-quality bivalve genome assemblies

- Application of state-of-the-art technologies, including laser microdissection and single-cell sequencing, to hundreds of tumours

- Development of specialised methods for comparative cancer genome analysis.

The intrinsic heterogeneity and short lifespans of most cancers may obscure their underlying biological patterns. By examining the convergent evolution of 10 long-lived cancers through a comparative-genomics lens, I intend to deliver fundamental insights into cancer biology and evolution.

Campo scientifico (EuroSciVoc)

CORDIS classifica i progetti con EuroSciVoc, una tassonomia multilingue dei campi scientifici, attraverso un processo semi-automatico basato su tecniche NLP.

È necessario effettuare l’accesso o registrarsi per utilizzare questa funzione

Meccanismo di finanziamento

HORIZON-ERC - HORIZON ERC Grants

Istituzione ospitante

THE CHANCELLOR MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 2 497 364,00
Indirizzo
TRINITY LANE THE OLD SCHOOLS
CB2 1TN Cambridge
Regno Unito

Mostra sulla mappa

Tipo di attività
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Collegamenti
Costo totale
€ 2 497 364,00

Beneficiari (1)