Wildlife populations are under intense anthropogenic pressures, with the geographic range of many species shrinking, dramatic reductions in population numbers and undisturbed habitats, and biodiversity loss. It is postulated that we are in the midst of a sixth (Anthropocene) mass extinction event, the first to be induced by human activity. Further, threatening vulnerable species is the increased rate of emerging diseases, another consequence of anthropogenic activities. Innovative approaches are required to help maintain healthy populations until the chronic underlying causes of these issues can be addressed. Fibropapillomatosis in sea turtles is one such wildlife disease. Here, we applied precision-medicine-based approaches to profile fibropapillomatosis tumors to better understand their biology, identify novel therapeutics, and gain insights into viral and environmental triggers for fibropapillomatosis. We show that fibropapillomatosis tumors share genetic vulnerabilities with human cancer types, revealing that they are amenable to treatment with human anti-cancer therapeutics.
Sea turtle populations are under threat from an epizootic tumor disease (animal epidemic) known as fibropapillomatosis. Fibropapillomatosis continues to spread geographically, with prevalence of the disease also growing at many longer-affected sites globally. However, we do not yet understand the precise environmental, mutational and viral events driving fibropapillomatosis tumor formation and progression.Here we perform transcriptomic and immunohistochemical profiling of five fibropapillomatosis tumor types: external new, established and postsurgical regrowth tumors, and internal lung and kidney tumors. We reveal that internal tumors are molecularly distinct from the more common external tumors. However, they have a small number of conserved potentially therapeutically targetable molecular vulnerabilities in common, such as the MAPK, Wnt, TGFβ and TNF oncogenic signaling pathways. These conserved oncogenic drivers recapitulate remarkably well the core pan-cancer drivers responsible for human cancers. Fibropapillomatosis has been considered benign, but metastatic-related transcriptional signatures are strongly activated in kidney and established external tumors. Tumors in turtles with poor outcomes (died/euthanized) have genes associated with apoptosis and immune function suppressed, with these genes providing putative predictive biomarkers.Together, these results offer an improved understanding of fibropapillomatosis tumorigenesis and provide insights into the origins, inter-tumor relationships, and therapeutic treatment for this wildlife epizootic.
Pathogen-induced cancers account for 15% of human tumors and are a growing concern for endangered wildlife. Fibropapillomatosis is an expanding virally and environmentally co-induced sea turtle tumor epizootic. Chelonid herpesvirus 5 (ChHV5) is implicated as a causative virus, but its transmission method and specific role in oncogenesis and progression is unclear. We applied environmental (e)DNA-based viral monitoring to assess viral shedding as a direct means of transmission, and the relationship between tumor burden, surgical resection and ChHV5 shedding. To elucidate the abundance and transcriptional status of ChHV5 across early, established, regrowth and internal tumors we conducted genomics and transcriptomics. We determined that ChHV5 is shed into the water column, representing a likely transmission route, and revealed novel temporal shedding dynamics and tumor burden correlations. ChHV5 was more abundant in the water column than in marine leeches. We also revealed that ChHV5 is latent in fibropapillomatosis, including early stage, regrowth and internal tumors; higher viral transcription is not indicative of poor patient outcome, and high ChHV5 loads predominantly arise from latent virus. These results expand our knowledge of the cellular and shedding dynamics of ChHV5 and can provide insights into temporal transmission dynamics and viral oncogenesis not readily investigable in tumors of terrestrial species.
Sea turtle populations are directly and indirectly under threat from a range of anthropogenic processes. Perhaps the most visibly apparent of these is the disfiguring tumor disease epizootic (animal epidemic) known as fibropapillomatosis. Fibropapillomatosis continues to spread geographically, with prevalence of the disease also growing at a number of affected sites globally. Environmental exposures seem key to inducing tumor development, possibly through weakening host immune systems to the point of enabling pathogen-induced tumor formation. However, we do not yet understand the precise molecular and mutational events driving fibropapillomatosis tumor formation and progression. Similarly, many open questions remain about the role of the herpesvirus (chelonid herpesvirus 5, ChHV5) associated with the disease as a potential co-trigger, and whether its occurrence within tumors is causative or opportunistic. Without improved understanding of the basic biology of this disease epizootic, treatment, containment and mitigation options are severely hampered.To address fundamental questions relating to the oncogenic signaling, mutational spectrum, viral load, viral transcriptional status (lytic or latent) and spread, we employed transcriptomic profiling, whole genome sequencing, immunohistochemistry and environmental (e)DNAbased monitoring of viral shedding. In particular we focused on the mutational landscape of tumors and assessing the transcriptional similarity of external (skin) and internal (visceral organs) tumors, and the oncogenic signaling events driving early stage tumor growth and post-surgical tumor regrowth. These analyses revealed that internal fibropapillomatosis tumors are molecularly distinct from the more common external tumors. However, our molecular analyses also revealed that there are a small number of conserved potentially therapeutically targetable molecular vulnerabilities in common between internal and external tumors, such as the MAPK, Wnt, TGFβ and TNF oncogenic signaling pathways. We also determined that the tumor genomes can harbor copy number gains, indicating potentially viral-independent oncogenic processes. Genes within such mutated genomic regions have known roles in human skin cancer, including MAPK-associated genes. Turtles attempt to mount an immune response, but in some animals this appears to be insufficient to prevent tumor development and growth. ChHV5 was transcriptionally latent in all tumor stages sequenced, including early stage and recurrent tumors. We also revealed that the tumors themselves are the primary source of viral shedding into the marine environment and, if they are surgically removed, the level of ChHV5 in the water column drops.Together, these results offer an improved understanding of fibropapillomatosis tumorigenesis and provide insights into the origins, therapeutic treatment, and appropriate quarantine responses for this wildlife epizootic. Furthermore, they provide insights into human pathogen-induced cancers, particularly mechanisms which are difficult to s...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.