XIII.—Tests of Carcinogenic Substances in Relation to the Production of Mutations in Drosophila melanogaster
- 1 January 1940
- journal article
- conference paper
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
- Vol. 60 (2), 164-173
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0370164600020150
Abstract
The theory has often been put forward that cancer is a somatic mutation. The changes which differentiate the cancerous cell from the normal are reproduced in many or all of the cells derived from the original malignant cell, i.e. they show the properties by which we define a mutation. Thus, to a geneticist, the possibility which most readily suggests itself is (1) that of a mutation in the genetic material of the somatic cell. Other possible mechanisms that might simulate the results of (1) are (2a) the introduction into the cell of a malignant virus; (2b) the “activation” of some such virus pre-existing in the cell in an inactive state, a situation which would imply mutation in the virus since the change becomes reproduced; (3) the production of some autocatalytic substance other than gene or virus, inducing malignant changes in the cell which contains a certain amount of it.Keywords
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