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Decoding the interplay between genetic and non-genetic drivers of metastasis

Panagiotis Karras, James R. M. Black, Nicholas McGranahan and Jean-Christophe Marine ()
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Panagiotis Karras: KU Leuven
James R. M. Black: UCL Cancer Institute
Nicholas McGranahan: UCL Cancer Institute
Jean-Christophe Marine: KU Leuven

Nature, 2024, vol. 629, issue 8012, 543-554

Abstract: Abstract Metastasis is a multistep process by which cancer cells break away from their original location and spread to distant organs, and is responsible for the vast majority of cancer-related deaths. Preventing early metastatic dissemination would revolutionize the ability to fight cancer. Unfortunately, the relatively poor understanding of the molecular underpinnings of metastasis has hampered the development of effective anti-metastatic drugs. Although it is now accepted that disseminating tumour cells need to acquire multiple competencies to face the many obstacles they encounter before reaching their metastatic site(s), whether these competencies are acquired through an accumulation of metastasis-specific genetic alterations and/or non-genetic events is often debated. Here we review a growing body of literature highlighting the importance of both genetic and non-genetic reprogramming events during the metastatic cascade, and discuss how genetic and non-genetic processes act in concert to confer metastatic competencies. We also describe how recent technological advances, and in particular the advent of single-cell multi-omics and barcoding approaches, will help to better elucidate the cross-talk between genetic and non-genetic mechanisms of metastasis and ultimately inform innovative paths for the early detection and interception of this lethal process.

Date: 2024
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07302-6

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