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Tamori, Y., & Deng, W. -M. (2017). Tissue-Intrinsic Tumor Hotspots: Terroir for Tumorigenesis. Trends In Cancer. Retrieved from http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_pmch_28718438
Epithelial tissues are highly organized systems with a remarkable homeostatic ability to maintain morphology through regulation of cellular proliferation and tissue integrity. This robust self-organizing system is progressively disrupted during tumor development. Recent studies of conserved tumor-suppressor genes in Drosophila showed how protumor cells deviate from the robustly organized tissue microenvironment to take the first steps into becoming aggressive tumors. Here we review the 'tumor hotspot' hypothesis that explains how the tissue-intrinsic local microenvironment has a pivotal role in the initial stage of tumorigenesis in Drosophila epithelia and discuss comparable mechanisms in mammalian tissues.
Tamori, Y., & Deng, W. -M. (2017). Tissue-Intrinsic Tumor Hotspots: Terroir for Tumorigenesis. Trends In Cancer. Retrieved from http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_pmch_28718438