Submitted:
16 May 2025
Posted:
19 May 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
Author’s Foreword
1. Introduction to Evolutionary Cancer Cell Biology (ECCB)
1.1. Cell Lines, Phenotypes and Function
1.2. Stemgermline’s Vulnerability to Stress and Genomic Damage
1.3. Genomic Repair Occurs Through Homotypic Cell Fusion and Hyperpolyploidization
1.4. Unicellularization - A Freak of Nature or an Evolutionary Inevitability?
| In summary, unicellularization is a process of genomic repair and cell fate changing, which occurs by genome reduction and inversion to a unicellular genomic state. Both pre-cancerous and intratumoral therapy-induced phases of senescence (TIS) require prolonged periods of restorative senescence, while DNA damage response and genomic repair can occur in untreated tumors and hypoxic cultures, bypassing prolonged senescence. |
2. Senescence, Apotosis and Cancer—An Overview
2.1. Senescence Duality – Current Knowledge
| Note. The above findings are largely consistent with results from evolutionary cancer cell biology (ECCB). At the time, however, the authors could not anticipate that pro-carcinogenic senescence represents a fundamentally distinct cell state—one that, rather than activating apoptotic programmed cell death (PCD) pathways, overrides the constraints of multicellularity and initiates survival-oriented MUT programs. These programs restore a unicellularized genome capable of enhanced DNA damage response. It was also not yet foreseeable that this process could give rise to new functional carcinogenic or tumorigenic stemgermlines, thereby generating primary and or secondary cancer stem cells (pCSCs, sCSCs). |
2.2. Do Apoptosis-like Programs Also Exist in Protists and Parasitic Life?
2.3. Is Apoptosis a Cancer Regulator?
3. Restorative Senescence (RS) and Cell Fate Change

3.1. RS Initiates Specific, Unicellular DDR Circuits
3.2. RS in Protists
3.3. RS Alone Cannot Reverse Genomic Damage
4.Cycles of Stemness Loss and Stemness Recovery; Aim and Function
4.1. Genomic Stability, Instability and the “Status Quo Ante“
4.2. The Distinct Roles of Homotypic and Heterotypic Cell Fusion in Genome Stability and Expansion
5. Previous Statements on Mitotic Arrest and Resumed Proliferation
5.1. Causes of Mitotic Arrest, Factors and Stressors
5.2. Senescence Reversibility: Stemness Recovery and Enhanced Tumorigenic Potential
5.3. Bright and Dark Senescence
5.4. Senescence and Tumors
5.5. Sen-Mark+ Cells
5.6. Inducers, Mediators, Effectors, and Markers
5.7. Therapy-INDUCED SENESCENCE (TIS)
6. Valid and Less Valid Statements of the Past on Senescent Exit and Tumorigenesis
6.1. “Stem Cells Do Not Senesces“
6.2. “Senescence Escapers Require the Acquisition of Polyploidy and Genomic Instability”
Polyploidy
Genomic Instability
6.3. Depolyploidization and Budding
6.4. “Neosis—An Atypical Cell Division”
7. Conclusions and Perspectives
Abbreviations
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