Abstract

BackgroundSpalax, the blind mole rat, developed an extraordinary cancer resistance during 40 million years of evolution in a subterranean, hypoxic, thus DNA damaging, habitat. In 50 years of Spalax research, no spontaneous cancer development has been observed. The mechanisms underlying this resistance are still not clarified. We investigated the genetic difference between Spalax and mice that might enable the Spalax relative resistance to cancer development. We compared Spalax and mice responses to a treatment with the carcinogen 3-Methylcholantrene, as a model to assess Spalax’ cancer-resistance.ResultsWe compared RNA-Seq data of untreated Spalax to Spalax with a tumor and identified a high number of differentially expressed genes. We filtered these genes by their expression in tolerant Spalax that resisted the 3MCA, and in mice, and found 25 genes with a consistent expression pattern in the samples susceptible to cancer among species.Contrasting the expressed genes in Spalax with benign granulomas to those in Spalax with malignant fibrosarcomas elucidated significant differences in several pathways, mainly related to the extracellular matrix and the immune system. We found a central cluster of ECM genes that differ greatly between conditions.Further analysis of these genes revealed potential microRNA targets.We also found higher levels of gene expression of some DNA repair pathways in Spalax than in other murines, like the majority of Fanconi Anemia pathway.ConclusionThe comparison of the treated with the untreated tissue revealed a regulatory complex that might give an answer how Spalax is able to restrict the tumor growth. By remodeling the extracellular matrix, the possible growth is limited, and the proliferation of cancer cells was potentially prevented. We hypothesize that this regulatory cluster plays a major role in the cancer resistance of Spalax. Furthermore, we identified 25 additional candidate genes that showed a distinct expression pattern in untreated or tolerant Spalax compared to animals that developed a developed either a benign or malignant tumor. While further study is necessary, we believe that these genes may serve as candidate markers in cancer detection.

Highlights

  • Spalax, the blind mole rat, developed an extraordinary cancer resistance during 40 million years of evolution in a subterranean, hypoxic, DNA damaging, habitat

  • To uncover a possible genetic predisposition to cancer resistance and cancer influence on the surrounding tissue, we compared tissue from untreated Spalax to tissue taken from the uninjected side of the neck of Spalax with tumor growth

  • We extended this comparison to tissue from mice to identify genes related to universal cancer development (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The blind mole rat, developed an extraordinary cancer resistance during 40 million years of evolution in a subterranean, hypoxic, DNA damaging, habitat. In 50 years of Spalax research, no spontaneous cancer development has been observed The mechanisms underlying this resistance are still not clarified. The long-lived (> 20 years) subterranean rodent Spalax (genus Spalax ehrenbergi complex) is a solitary inhabitant of sealed underground burrows in the Eastern Mediterranean region [1]. While these tunnels protect the animals from predation and climatic extremes, they are prone to sharp drops in O2 levels, which can reach ~ 7% in the rainy season [2]. Spalax displays an extraordinary hypoxia tolerance that has evolved over 40 million years of the species existence in habitats with frequent drops in oxygen. The extraordinary hypoxia tolerance of Spalax is achieved through several morphological and physiological mechanisms of respiration-related genes and their regulation [3,4,5] including high blood vessel density, which results in a shorter diffusion distance for oxygen and high levels of activity compared to other murine species [3,4,5]

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