Tumour progression involves a series of phenotypic changes to cancer cells, each of which presents therapeutic targets. Here, using techniques adapted from microbial experimental evolution, we investigate the evolution of tumour spreading - a precursor for metastasis and tissue invasion - in environments with varied resource supply. Evolutionary theory predicts that competition for resources within a population will select for individuals to move away from a natal site (i.e. disperse), facilitating the colonisation of unexploited resources and decreasing competition between kin. After approximately 100 generations in environments with low resource supply, we find that MCF7 breast cancer spheroids (small in vitro tumours) show increased spre...
Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic progression. Th...
Cancer is now understood to be a process that follows Darwinian evolution. Heterogeneous populations...
Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic progression. Th...
Tumour progression involves a series of phenotypic changes to cancer cells, each of which presents t...
Tumour progression involves a series of phenotypic changes to cancer cells, each of which presents t...
Tumour progression involves a series of phenotypic changes to cancer cells, each of which presents t...
Evolutionary processes play a central role in the development, progression and response to treatment...
Cancer cells are known to modify their micro-environment such that it can sustain a larger populatio...
Cancer cells are known to modify their micro-environment such that it can sustain a larger populatio...
Background: Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic pro...
An important question in cancer evolution concerns which traits make a cell likely to successfully m...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
How cancer cells acquire the competence to colonize distant organs remains a central question in can...
BACKGROUND: Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic pro...
Tumours evolve to cope with environmental stresses or challenges such as nutrient starvation, deplet...
Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic progression. Th...
Cancer is now understood to be a process that follows Darwinian evolution. Heterogeneous populations...
Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic progression. Th...
Tumour progression involves a series of phenotypic changes to cancer cells, each of which presents t...
Tumour progression involves a series of phenotypic changes to cancer cells, each of which presents t...
Tumour progression involves a series of phenotypic changes to cancer cells, each of which presents t...
Evolutionary processes play a central role in the development, progression and response to treatment...
Cancer cells are known to modify their micro-environment such that it can sustain a larger populatio...
Cancer cells are known to modify their micro-environment such that it can sustain a larger populatio...
Background: Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic pro...
An important question in cancer evolution concerns which traits make a cell likely to successfully m...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
How cancer cells acquire the competence to colonize distant organs remains a central question in can...
BACKGROUND: Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic pro...
Tumours evolve to cope with environmental stresses or challenges such as nutrient starvation, deplet...
Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic progression. Th...
Cancer is now understood to be a process that follows Darwinian evolution. Heterogeneous populations...
Metastasis represents one of the most clinically important transitions in neoplastic progression. Th...