PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New understanding of why anti-cancer therapy stops working at a specific stage

2013-06-24
(Press-News.org) Jerusalem, June 23, 2013 –Researchers at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and in California have achieved a breakthrough in understanding how and why a promising anti-cancer therapy has failed to achieve hoped-for success in killing tumor cells. Their work could lead to new insights into overcoming this impasse.

The problematic therapy investigated involves suppression of the protein mTOR (mammalian target Of Rapamycin). MTOR plays an important role in regulating how cells process molecular signals from their environment, and it is observed as strongly activated in many solid cancers.

Drug-induced suppression of mTOR has until now shown success in causing the death of cancer cells in the outer layers of cancerous tumors, but has been disappointing in clinical trials in dealing with the core of those tumors.

Reduced oxygen supply -- hypoxia -- is a near-universal feature of solid tumors that can alter how tumors respond to therapies. It was known that the behavior of mTOR signaling is influenced and altered by the condition of hypoxia, but the mechanism to explain this was unknown.

A research team, which included Prof. Emeritus Raphael D. Levine of the Institute of Chemistry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and researchers from the California Institute of Technology and the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, investigated whether the influence of hypoxia on mTOR signaling in model brain cancer systems could explain the poor performance of mTOR drugs. Their work appeared in a recent article in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) in the US.

For their investigation, they employed a new microchip technology that allowed them to measure the mTOR protein signaling network in individual cancer cells, and they interpreted the results using a new set of theoretical tools derived from the physical sciences. The combined approach permitted the simplification of an otherwise complex biological system.

They found that at a particular level of oxygen starvation (hypoxia) that is common in solid tumors, the mTOR signaling network switches between two sets of properties. At the switching point, the theoretical models predicted that mTOR would be intrinsically unresponsive to drugging.

Furthermore, the combined experiment and theory results indicated that the switch could be interpreted as a type of phase transition, which has not been previously observed in biological systems.

This phase transition is the point of the switch between the two signaling networks and happens very abruptly. The change in signaling means that the body of cells studied no longer responds in the way it did before. In the case of the tumor, the "drugging" of the mTOR ceases, meaning that the tumor is no longer inhibited.

These results have several implications. First, they may explain the poor clinical performance of mTOR inhibitors. Second, they indicate that certain complex biological behaviors, which often confound scientists who are seeking to find effective therapies for human diseases, may be understood by the effective application of experimental and theoretical tools derived from the physical sciences.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Plants do sums to get through the night

2013-06-24
New research shows that to prevent starvation at night, plants perform accurate arithmetic division. The calculation allows them to use up their starch reserves at a constant rate so that they run out almost precisely at dawn. "This is the first concrete example in a fundamental biological process of such a sophisticated arithmetic calculation," said mathematical modeller Professor Martin Howard from the John Innes Centre. Plants feed themselves during the day by using energy from the sun to convert carbon dioxide into sugars and starch. Once the sun has set, they must ...

How cholera-causing bacteria respond to pressure

2013-06-24
Cholera remains common in non-industrialized parts of the world today. It persists in part because V. cholera, the bacteria that causes the disease, is able to survive in diverse environments ranging from the intestinal lumen, to fresh water, to estuaries, to the sea. A study in The Journal of General Physiology provides new insights about the membrane components of V. cholera that enable it to withstand otherwise deadly increases in osmotic pressure resulting from changes in its surrounding environment. Like other bacteria, V. cholera utilizes mechanosensitive channels ...

JCI early table of contents for June 24, 2013

2013-06-24
A prenatal trigger for postnatal obesity During pregnancy, the health of the mother and the intrauterine environment can have dramatic and lasting effects on the child. Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (ICP) is a liver disease that affects 0.5-2% of pregnant women and is characterized by increased bile acid levels in the maternal serum. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Catherine Williamson and colleagues at Imperial College London studied the long term impact of ICP in a cohort of Finnish families. They found that as teenagers, individuals ...

A prenatal trigger for postnatal obesity

2013-06-24
During pregnancy, the health of the mother and the intrauterine environment can have dramatic and lasting effects on the child. Intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy (ICP) is a liver disease that affects 0.5-2% of pregnant women and is characterized by increased bile acid levels in the maternal serum. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Catherine Williamson and colleagues at Imperial College London studied the long term impact of ICP in a cohort of Finnish families. They found that as teenagers, individuals born to women with ICP had altered metabolic ...

Modified immune cells seek and destroy melanoma

2013-06-24
In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, researchers led by Scott Pruitt at Duke University and Merck Research Laboratories report on a human clinical trial in which modified dendritic cells, a component of the immune system, were tested in patients with melanoma. All cells express a complex known as the proteasome, which acts as the garbage disposal for the cell. There are two types of proteasomes: constitutive proteasomes (cPs), which are found in normal tissues, and immunoproteasomes (iPs), which are found in stressed or damaged cells. In a damaged cell, ...

No evidence of increased risk of Guillain-Barre syndrome following vaccination

2013-06-24
OAKLAND, Calif., June 24, 2013 – Patients are not at increased risk of Guillain-Barré syndrome in the six-week period after vaccination with any vaccine, including influenza, according to a Kaiser Permanente study published in Clinical Infectious Diseases. The retrospective study by researchers at the Kaiser Permanente Vaccine Study Center spanned 13 years and was controlled for seasonality. "If there is a risk of Guillain-Barré syndrome following any vaccine, including influenza vaccines, it is extremely low," said Roger Baxter, MD, co-director of the Kaiser Permanente ...

New research points to potential treatment strategies for multiple sclerosis

2013-06-24
Myelin, the fatty coating that protects neurons in the brain and spinal cord, is destroyed in diseases such as multiple sclerosis. Researchers have been striving to determine whether oligodendrocytes, the cells that produce myelin, can be stimulated to make new myelin. Using live imaging in zebrafish to track oligodendrocytes in real time, researchers reporting in the June 24 issue of the Cell Press journal Developmental Cell discovered that individual oligodendrocytes coat neurons with myelin for only five hours after they are born. If the findings hold true in humans, ...

U-shaped curve revealed for association between fish consumption and atrial fibrillation

2013-06-24
Athens, Greece, 24 June 2013. Moderation seems to be key when it comes to eating fish to prevent atrial fibrillation (AF) according to an observational study presented at the EHRA EUROPACE congress held 23 to 26 June in Athens, Greece. The study found a U-shaped association between consumption of marine n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (n-3 PUFA) and the risk of developing AF, with people who have both low and high intakes found to suffer more from AF than those with median intakes. The lowest risk of AF was found in those who consumed around 0.63 g marine n-3 PUFA per ...

Malawi trial saves newborn lives

2013-06-24
A five-year programme that mobilised communities to improve the quality of care for mothers and newborns reduced newborn mortality by 30 percent and saved at least 1,000 newborn lives in rural Malawi. The study, carried out in three rural districts in Malawi with a combined population of more than two million, was designed to test whether a combined effort to increase both community awareness and strategies for perinatal care and to improve the quality of healthcare would be more effective than either one alone. The study showed that the combination worked best. "The ...

Lowering costs for higher-cost medicare patients through better outpatient care may be limited

2013-06-24
In an analysis that included a sample of patients in the top portion of Medicare spending, only a small percentage of their costs appeared to be related to preventable emergency department visits and hospitalizations, limiting the ability to lower costs for these patients through better outpatient care, according to a study in the June 26 issue of JAMA. The study is being released early to coincide with its presentation at the AcademyHealth annual research meeting. "High and increasing health care costs are arguably the single biggest threat to the long-term fiscal solvency ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

People from low-income communities smoke more, are more addicted and are less likely to quit

No association between mRNA COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy and autism in children, new research shows

Twist-controlled magnetism grows beyond the moiré

Root microbes could help oak trees adapt to drought

Emergency department–initiated buprenorphine for opioid use disorder

Call for action on understudied lung cancer in never-smokers

Different visual experiences give rise to different neural wiring

Wearable trackers can detect depression relapse weeks before it returns, study finds

Air pollution and the progression of physical function limitations and disability in aging adults

Historically Black college or university attendance and cognition in US Black adults

New “crucial” advance for quantum computers: researchers manage to read information stored in Majorana qubits

7,000 years of change: How humans reshaped Caribbean coral reef food chains

Virus-based therapy boosts anti-cancer immune responses to brain cancer

Ancient fish ear stones reveal modern Caribbean reefs have lost their dietary complexity

American College of Lifestyle Medicine announces updated dietary position statement for treatment and prevention of chronic disease

New findings highlight two decades of evidence supporting pecans in heart-healthy diets

Case report explores potential link between mRNA COVID-19 vaccines and cancer

Healthy versions of low-carb and low-fat diets linked to better cardiovascular and metabolic health

Low-carb and low-fat diets associated with lower heart disease risk if rich in high-quality, plant-based foods, low in animal products

ASH publishes clinical practice guidelines on frontline and relapsed/refractory management of all in adolescents and young adults

City of Hope research spotlight, January 2026

Keeping an eagle eye on carbon stored in the ocean

FAU study: Tiny worm offers clues to combat chemotherapy neurotoxicity

The ACMG Foundation 2026 Early Career Travel Award is presented to Bianca Seminotti, Ph.D.

Rural cancer patients do just as well when having surgery close to home

New biosensor technology could improve glucose monitoring

Successful press conference for Special Issue II of the JSE Himalayas Series

Hair extensions contain many more dangerous chemicals than previously thought

Elevated lead levels could flow from some US drinking water kiosks

Fragile X study uncovers brainwave biomarker bridging humans and mice

[Press-News.org] New understanding of why anti-cancer therapy stops working at a specific stage