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Publication Type : Journal Article
Publisher : MDPI AG
Source : International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Url : https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27072989
Campus : Amritapuri
School : School of Biotechnology
Year : 2026
Abstract : Neurodegeneration and cancer are fundamentally distinct disorders: one signifies gradual neuronal loss while the latter signifies uncontrolled cell growth and survival. However, emerging evidence explores an inverse association between these conditions, suggesting that they do not arise from independent biological processes. Understanding the context-dependent behaviour of major pathways (for example, p53, PI3K/AKT/mTOR, Wnt, and immune–stress signaling) remains pivotal in elucidating the relationship between these two diseases. Pathways promoting early-life fitness, tissue repair, and tumor suppression in dividing cells can become detrimental later in life for post-mitotic neurons. Cross-species genomics studies reveal how evolution has repeatedly adapted these shared networks to balance cancer resistance with survival. Research on species exhibiting exceptional longevity and disease resistance, including naked mole rats and bowhead whales, shows that cancer resistance and longevity are not fixed traits but rather are controlled by precise regulatory mechanisms. In this review, we integrate insights from broad species genomics and multi-omic and single-cell studies to understand how evolutionarily conserved molecular crosstalks diverge at the interface of cancer and neurodegeneration.
Cite this Research Publication : Bhargavi Rajarathinam, Durga Nandan, Parvathy Venugopal, Amritha M. Nair, Subin John, Bipin G. Nair, Rajaguru Aradhya, Conserved Pathways, Divergent Outcomes: A Cross-Species Genomic Perspective on the Cancer–Neurodegeneration Paradox, International Journal of Molecular Sciences, MDPI AG, 2026, https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27072989