Autor/a

Dawson, Erika H.

Bailly, Tiphaine P. M.

Dos Santos, Julie

Moreno, Céline

Devilliers, Maëlle

Maroni, Brigitte

Sueur, Cédric

Casali, Andreu

Ujvari, Beata

Thomas, Frederic

Montagne, Jacques

Mery, Frederic

Data de publicació

2018-10-15T07:28:21Z

2018-10-15T07:28:21Z

2018



Resum

The influence of oncogenic phenomena on the ecology and evolution of animal species is becoming an important research topic. Similar to host–pathogen interactions, cancer negatively affects host fitness, which should lead to the selection of host control mechanisms, including behavioral traits that best minimize the proliferation of malignant cells. Social behavior is suggested to influence tumor progression. While the ecological benefits of sociality in gregarious species are widely acknowledged, only limited data are available on the role of the social environment on cancer progression. Here, we exposed adult Drosophila, with colorectal-like tumors, to different social environments. We show how subtle variations in social structure have dramatic effects on the progression of tumor growth. Finally, we reveal that flies can discriminate between individuals at different stages of tumor development and selectively choose their social environment accordingly. Our study demonstrates the reciprocal links between cancer and social interactions and how sociality may impact health and fitness in animals and its potential implications for disease ecology.


This work was supported by the ANR (Blanc project EVOCAN to F.T. and project DROSONET to F.M. and C.S.), the CNRS (INEE and INSB), Fondation ARC (1555286 to J.M. and F.M.), The French league against Cancer (M27218 to J.M.), IDEEV program (to F.M.), by an International Associated Laboratory Project France/Australia, by the French-Australian Science Innovation Collaboration Program Early Career Fellowship (B.U.), by André Hoffmann (Fondation MAVA), Fyssen Foundation (to F.M. and E.H. D.) and the French Government (fellowship 2015–155 to M.D.).

Tipus de document

Article
Versió publicada

Llengua

Anglès

Publicat per

Springer Nature

Documents relacionats

Reproducció del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05737-w

Nature Communications, 2018, vol. 9, núm. 3574, p. 1-7

Drets

cc-by (c) Erika H. Dawson et al., 2018

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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