Conclusions
While genetic and molecular etiology of cells and the changes in the
composition of surrounding extracellular environment have been explored
as therapeutic targets to treat many diseases originating from
epithelial tissues, including cancer104,105; how
diseased conditions arise and how noise within the tissue may regulate
initiation of pathology remains elusive. Understanding the underlying
heterogeneity in tissues and its role in tumorigenesis will help us
appreciate the organizational principles and emergent self-regulatory
properties of collective living systems. Acknowledging the role of
heterogeneity in tissues might prompt biologists to move away from time
and population averaged studies, and lead to important discoveries.
While the impact of mechanical and biochemical heterogeneity on tissue
function have been studied in isolation, the exciting possibility of
their interdependency being an inherent tissue property and contributing
to emergent tissue functions has not been explored. Extrapolating
lessons from epithelia and pondering on the relevance of noise in
biological systems across multiple scales raises an intriguing question-
could scale-invariant fundamental principles rooted in noise contribute
to the emergent self-regulatory properties unique to life?