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- Fundamentals of Evolution and Medicine
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1. Evolutionary medicine
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
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2. Evolution and medicine: from the perspective of an evolutionary biologist
- Prof. Stephen C. Stearns
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3. Developmental plasticity, evolution and the origins of disease
- Dr. Mary Jane West-Eberhard
- Evolutionary Genetics
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4. Genetic variation and human disease
- Dr. David Houle
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5. Ecogenetics, evolutionary biology and human disease
- Prof. Gilbert Omenn
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6. Race in genetics and medicine
- Prof. Jeffrey Long
- Infectious Disease
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8. Evolutionary arms races
- Prof. Mark Pagel
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9. Evolution of drug resistance
- Dr. Pleuni Pennings
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10. Evolution of virulence: malaria, a case study
- Prof. Andrew Read
- Defenses
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11. Fever and related defenses
- Prof. Matthew Kluger
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12. The evolutionary ecology of immunity
- Prof. Paul Schmid-Hempel
- Novel Environmental Factors
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13. What did humans evolve to eat? evolutionary perspectives on human nutritional health
- Prof. William R. Leonard
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17. Diseases of civilization: an evolutionary legacy
- Prof. Alan Weder
- Problems Arising From Constraints and Trade-Offs
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18. Aging and evolutionary medicine
- Prof. Linda Partridge
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19. Human aging and menopause
- Prof. Kristen Hawkes
- Sex and Reproduction
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20. Setting the second stage: the evolution of menopause & post-reproductive life
- Prof. Lynnette Sievert
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21. Evolutionary obstetrics
- Prof. Wenda Trevathan
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22. Sex differences in mortality
- Dr. Daniel Kruger
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23. The endocrinology of human life history transitions
- Prof. Peter Ellison
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24. Genetic conflicts in human pregnancy
- Prof. David Haig
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25. Environmental effects on human reproduction
- Prof. Gillian Bentley
- Cancer
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26. A darwinian eye view of cancer
- Prof. Mel Greaves
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27. Viruses and cancer
- Prof. Robin Weiss
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28. Connecting aging and cancer through the lens of evolution
- Prof. James DeGregori
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29. Evolutionary dynamics in cancer control and cure
- Dr. Bob Gatenby
- Specific Body Systems
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30. Hard tissue biology in human health and evolution: enamel biology
- Prof. Timothy Bromage
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31. Hard tissue biology in human health and evolution: bone biology
- Prof. Timothy Bromage
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32. Hard tissue biology in human health and evolution: craniofacial biology
- Prof. Timothy Bromage
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33. Hard tissue biology in human health and evolution: life history and chronobiology
- Prof. Timothy Bromage
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34. Lung biology and lung disease
- Prof. John S. Torday
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35. The evolutionary web of life
- Prof. John S. Torday
- Mental Disorders
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36. Evolutionary psychiatry
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
- Paediatrics
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37. Evolutionary pediatrics
- Dr. Paul Turke
- Microbiome
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38. Evolution, the microbiome, and human health
- Dr. Joe Alcock
- Archived Lectures *These may not cover the latest advances in the field
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39. The hygiene hypothesis
- Prof. Graham Rook
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40. Mapping motivations: evolutionary health promotion
- Dr. Valerie Curtis
- Dr. Robert Aunger
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41. Evolutionary biology of depression
- Prof. Lewis Wolpert
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42. Evolutionary genetic epidemiology
- Prof. Nicholas Schork
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43. Mental disorders in the light of evolutionary biology
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
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44. Evolution: medicine's missing basic science
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
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45. Environmental effects on human reproduction
- Prof. Gillian Bentley
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47. Health disparities in common complex diseases: a role for genetics?
- Dr. Kathleen Barnes
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48. Infection and chronic disease
- Prof. Paul Ewald
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49. The paleolithic lifestyle and prevention of chronic disease
- Prof. S. Boyd Eaton
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50. Evolutionary considerations and the endothelium
- Dr. William Aird
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51. Evolutionary behavioural genetics and mental disorders
- Dr. Matthew Keller
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52. Audience questions about evolution and medicine
- Prof. Randolph Nesse
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53. Why we cook with spices: preventative darwinian medicine
- Prof. Paul Sherman
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54. Antibiotic resistance and hospital-acquired infection
- Dr. Carl Bergstrom
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Viruses are the smallest parasites
- Viruses can only be seen with electronmicroscope
- Human viruses
- What is cancer?
- Clonal evolution of a cancer
- Genes involved in cancer
- Causes of cancer
- Animal viruses taught us about cancer biology
- Human viruses associated with malignancy
- Direct and indirect oncogenesis by viruses
- DNA tumor viruses
- Transforming genes of DNA tumor viruses
- Oncogenic RNA tumor viruses (retroviruses)
- Retrovirus life cycle
- Cell transformation by Rous sarcoma virus (1)
- Cell transformation by Rous sarcoma virus (2)
- Gene structure of tumor viruses
- Oncogenes in retroviruses or activated in cells
- Signal transduction pathways in cancer (1)
- Signal transduction pathways in cancer (2)
- Oncogenic viruses as a cause of cancer
- Multifactorial causes of cancer (1)
- Multifactorial causes of cancer (2)
- Multifactorial causes of cancer (3)
- Cellular homologs in KSHV genome
- Oncogenic viruses and cancer in AIDS
- Treat the infection or the cancer?
- One virus leads to two or more diseases
- Human retroviruses
- Adult T-cell leukemia (ATL)
- Viral cancer vaccines
- Vaccination against infection
- Oncogenic viruses that don't cause human cancer
- Cancer is a rare outcome of frequent infections
- Cancers attributable to infection worldwide in 2002
- A 'Richter' scale of annual global mortality
- Conclusions
Topics Covered
- Oncogenic viruses of animals and humans have given us insights into cancer in general
- Specific genes involved in cancer such as oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes were first discovered through research on tumor viruses
- Only a subset of viruses cause cancer
- For cancers caused by viruses, the viruses are a necessary but insufficient cause of the disease
- Cancer is multifactorial and different risk factors act together
- Vaccines hold great promise to reduce the cancer burden
- The incidence is higher in immunodeficient people
- Transplant recipients and AIDS
Links
Series:
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Talk Citation
Weiss, R. (2020, August 16). Viruses and cancer [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved July 1, 2025, from https://doi.org/10.69645/FWTA8151.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Robin Weiss has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.