University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Computational and Systems Biology Seminar Series 2023 - 24 > Transmissible cancers: when cancer cells become infectious agents?

Transmissible cancers: when cancer cells become infectious agents?

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  • UserElizabeth Murchison, The Transmissible Cancer Group, Department of Veterinary Medicine.
  • ClockWednesday 09 November 2022, 14:00-15:00
  • HouseCMS, Meeting Room 15.

If you have a question about this talk, please contact Samantha Noel.

Our intention is to deliver all Seminars in person. Seminars are aimed mainly at MPhil CompBio students, but are open to anyone who wishes to attend by pre-booking with the Administrator.

Cancer arises when mutations drive cells of the body to abandon their usual functions and to instead embark upon a “selfish” evolutionary programme underpinned by abnormal growth. Most cancers exist only within the bodies of the hosts that spawn them; rarely, however, cancers can acquire adaptations allowing them to spread between individuals. In such transmissible cancers the cancer cells themselves become agents of infection. Elizabeth Murchison will discuss recent research on the origins and evolution of the naturally occurring mammalian transmissible cancers affecting dogs and Tasmanian devils.

This talk is part of the Computational and Systems Biology Seminar Series 2023 - 24 series.

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