Systems Biology of Cancer Metastasis

Yasir Suhail(Yale Cancer Center), Margo P. Cain(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Kiran Vanaja(Yale Cancer Center), Paul Kurywchak(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Andre Levchenko(Yale Cancer Center), Raghu Kalluri(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), Kshitiz Gupta(Yale Cancer Center)
Cell Systems
August 1, 2019
Cited by 453Open Access
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Abstract

Cancer metastasis is no longer viewed as a linear cascade of events but rather as a series of concurrent, partially overlapping processes, as successfully metastasizing cells assume new phenotypes while jettisoning older behaviors. The lack of a systemic understanding of this complex phenomenon has limited progress in developing treatments for metastatic disease. Because metastasis has traditionally been investigated in distinct physiological compartments, the integration of these complex and interlinked aspects remains a challenge for both systems-level experimental and computational modeling of metastasis. Here, we present some of the current perspectives on the complexity of cancer metastasis, the multiscale nature of its progression, and a systems-level view of the processes underlying the invasive spread of cancer cells. We also highlight the gaps in our current understanding of cancer metastasis as well as insights emerging from interdisciplinary systems biology approaches to understand this complex phenomenon.


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