Devils’ Cancer Catching
The Tasmanian Devil (Sarcophilus harrisii) is a carnivorous marsupial now found in the wild only in the Australian island state of Tasmania. The Tasmanian Devil is the only extant member of the genus Sarcophilus.
It is also on the brink of extinction.
The existential threat facing the Tasmanian Devil is not anthropogenic in origin. The devils are suffering from a epidemic of cancer which has afflicted and killed over 70% of their wild population. Unless something can be done halt the cancer, Devil Facial Tumour Disease (DFTD) is expected to kill off the Tasmanian Devil within the next 25 – 50 years.
What is completely unique about DFTD is that it is contagious. The Tasmanian Devils are facing extinction from a transmissible form of cancer. They are literally experiencing and epidemic of cancer.
At least scientists have now discovered the nature of the cancer involved in DFTD.
Scientists have discovered the true identity of a contagious form of cancer that is killing Tasmanian devils. The cancer, called devil facial tumor disease, stems from cells that normally insulate nerve fibers, a new study shows.
Genetic analysis of tumors taken from infected devils in different parts of Tasmania reveals that these insulating cells, known as Schwann cells, became cancerous in a single Tasmanian devil and have since passed to other devils, an international group of researchers reports in the Jan. 1 Science.
Previously, scientists had suspected that a virus might be the source of the infection, but the new study confirms that cancer cells themselves are transmitted from devil to devil.
Knowing the origin of the contagious tumors could help conservationists diagnose the disease more accurately and may eventually lead to a vaccine that would target tumor proteins, says Katherine Belov, a geneticist at the University of Sydney who was not involved with the project.
A vaccine against the facial tumor disease, “while now pie in the sky, in 10 years might not be,” says Gregory Hannon, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on Long Island, N.Y. “Ten years might be enough time” to save the devils from extinction, he says.
As terrifying and freakish as the thought of a contagious cancer is, this is a phenomenon that is restricted to species such as the Tasmanian Devil – and possibly the Cheetah – whose populations have essentially no genetic diversity. They’re so genetically similar to one another that cells, cancerous or not, transmitted between individual animals are not recognized as foreign invaders.
Hopefully though, this new discovery of the form of the cancer ravaging the Tasmanian Devils may enable scientists to develop either a vaccine or a treatment for the animals and thereby save the species from extinction.
Tags: Animals | Australia | Cancer | Disease | Ecology | Environment | Science | Tazmanian Devil | Zoology



January 2nd, 2010 at 12:28 pm
This is the first I am hearing of a cancer that is contagious. While I understand that there is not threat of this specific form of cancer jumping to humans, the fact that cancer can be passed from on organism to another is a bit disturbing. Aside from the devils, and possibly cheetahs, are there other forms of contagious cancers that you are aware of?
By the way, nice site.
January 2nd, 2010 at 2:27 pm
Zhann,
Don’t be disturbed; the only known reason that this particular cancer is contagious is that the Tasmanian Devils are so freaking genetically similar – read as nearly identical – that their bodies can’t differentiate between their own cells and the cells of other Tasmanian Devils.
As for the cheetahs – I was extrapolating on the phenomenon. There is currently no transmissible cancer in the cheetah population, but they’re genetically similar enough that I think it could possibly happen.
…And thanks for the compliment on the site.
December 21st, 2010 at 1:57 am
Hey!