The first embryo, the origin of cancer and animal phylogeny. III. The totipotency as revealed by morphogenesis and the neoplasia controlled by cellular differentiation
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Date
2024-06
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The Indian Academy of Sciences
Abstract
We have extensively described that the neoplastic process (NP) has deep evolutionary roots and we have made specific predictions about the connection between cancer and the formation of the first embryo, which allowed for the evolutionary radiation of metazoans. My main hypothesis is that the NP is at the heart of cellular mechanisms responsible for animal morphogenesis, and given its embryological basis, also at the center of cell differentiation—one of the most interesting and relevant aspects of embryogenesis. In this article, I take forward the idea of the role of physics in the modeling of the neoplastic functional module (NFM) and its contribution to morphogenesis to reveal the totipotency of the zygote. In my consideration of these arguments, I examine mechanical and biophysical clues and their intimate connection with cellular differentiation. I expound on how cancer biology is perfectly intertwined with embryonic differentiation and why it is considered a disease of cell differentiation. The neoplasia is controlled by textural gradients that lead to cell differentiation within the embryo. Thus, the embryo would be a benign tumor. Finally, inspired by evolutionary history and by what the nervous system represents for current biology and based on the impressive nervous system of ctenophores as seen in fossil records, I propose a hypothesis with physical foundations (mechanical morphogenesis) for the formation of a preneural pattern of the nervous system of the first animal embryo.
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Keywords
Cancer, differentiation, embryology, evolution, neoplasia, physics, the first embryo
Citation
COFRE JAIME. The first embryo, the origin of cancer and animal phylogeny. III. The totipotency as revealed by morphogenesis and the neoplasia controlled by cellular differentiation. Journal of Biosciences. 2024 Jun; 49: 1-19