Lineage dependency and lineage-survival oncogenes in human cancer

LA Garraway, WR Sellers - Nature Reviews Cancer, 2006 - nature.com
Nature Reviews Cancer, 2006nature.com
Although cell-lineage and differentiation models dominate tumour classification and
treatment, the recognition that cancer is also a genomic disease has prompted a
reconfiguration of cancer taxonomies according to molecular criteria. Recent evidence
indicates that a synthesis of lineage-based and genetic paradigms might offer new insights
into crucial and therapeutically pliable tumour dependencies. For example, MITF
(microphthalmia-associated transcription factor), which is a master regulator of the …
Abstract
Although cell-lineage and differentiation models dominate tumour classification and treatment, the recognition that cancer is also a genomic disease has prompted a reconfiguration of cancer taxonomies according to molecular criteria. Recent evidence indicates that a synthesis of lineage-based and genetic paradigms might offer new insights into crucial and therapeutically pliable tumour dependencies. For example, MITF (microphthalmia-associated transcription factor), which is a master regulator of the melanocyte lineage, might become a melanoma oncogene when deregulated in certain genetic contexts. MITF and other lineage-survival genes therefore implicate lineage dependency (or lineage addiction) as a newly recognized mechanism that is affected by tumour genetic alterations.
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