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Contagious Cancer: Genome Study Reveals How Tasmanian Devil Cancer Has Spread

This article was published in Scientific American’s former blog network and reflects the views of the author, not necessarily those of Scientific American


A killer cancer that is threatening to wipe Tasmanian devils off the map for good has been spreading—from an original infected female 15 years ago—via live cancer cells, according to evidence from genome sequences of the cancer and the animal, published online Thursday in Cell. Finding out how this happened could help save this species from extinction—and it could also prepare researchers for the unlikely event that a contagious cancer ever appeared in humans.

The facial cancer, which is spread through bites, has plagued this animal's precarious population for more than a decade. Tasmanian devils (Sarcophilus harrisii) are the largest surviving carnivorous marsupials and live on Australia's island state Tasmania. [Read more about this scourge in "The Devil's Cancer," from Scientific American's June 2011 issue.] All of the tumors afflicting the animals today contain cells from one original devil, genetic sequences show. "I call her the immortal devil," Elizabeth Murchison, a researcher at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and co-author of the new paper, said in a prepared statement. "Her cells are living on long after she died."

An earlier version of the Tasmanian devil genome was published last year in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and revealed some secrets about why the cancer hasn't killed off the species already. One of the two devils sequenced, named Cedric, showed resistance to at least two strains of the cancer, although he later succumbed to a third.


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"The Tasmanian devil cancer is the only cancer that is threatening an entire species with extinction," Murchison said. After the first tumor appears on the doomed animals face, it will likely die within three months.

But by turning to genetics, researchers and conservationists hope to be able to find clues to at least slow the cancer's spread. The researchers studied tumors from 104 tumors collected from Tasmanian devils from various locations on the island and found that there were separate geographic groups of cancer types—but that all of them contained cells from the original female. "Sequencing the genome of this cancer has allowed us to catalogue the mutations that caused this cancer to arise and to persist," Murchison said. More detailed genetic details could point the way to targeted cancer drugs. It might also suggest how the cancer is able to sneak past the immune system and start its explosive growth so quickly.

"Tracing the evolutionary history and spread of this cancer helps us to understand not only what caused this disease but also to predict how it might behave in the future," David Bentley, chief scientist at Illumina Cambridge, Ltd. and study co-author, said in a prepared statement.

The Tasmanian devil's cancer has more than 17,000 mutations. "This is fewer mutations that are found in some human cancers and indicates that cancers do not need to be extremely unstable in order to become contagious," Bentley said. Only one other type of contagious cancer is known—a venereal tumor that infects dogs and wolves. The next step is "to use the genome sequence to understand more about how this cancer became transmissible," Michael Stratton, director of the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute and study co-author, said in a prepared statement. "Cancers that transmit through populations are obviously incredibly rare,” he said, “but we should use the Tasmanian devil example to be prepared in the extremely unlikely event that such an epidemic ever occurs in humans."

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