Longevity & AgingHow Early Cancer Cells Hijack Healthy Tissue to Build Their Own Growth Environment
Scientists have uncovered how early-stage lung cancer cells manipulate their neighboring environment to support tumor growth, long before a cancer diagnosis is possible. Using genetically engineered mice, researchers showed that lung cells carrying a common KRAS mutation enter a wound-repair-like state and release a signaling molecule called amphiregulin (AREG). This molecule reprograms nearby structural cells (fibroblasts) and immune cells (macrophages), turning healthy tissue into a tumor-permissive niche. The discovery reveals cancer development as a staged process involving cross-talk between mutant and normal cells, and opens the door to intercepting cancer at its earliest, most treatable phase — potentially before any tumor forms at all.