(Press-News.org) Contact information: Sarah McDonnell
s_mcd@mit.edu
617-253-8923
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Biologists ID new cancer weakness
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- About half of all cancer patients have a mutation in a gene called p53, which allows tumors to survive and continue growing even after chemotherapy severely damages their DNA.
A new study from MIT biologists has found that tumor cells with mutated p53 can be made much more vulnerable to chemotherapy by blocking another gene called MK2. In a study of mice, tumors lacking both p53 and MK2 shrank dramatically when treated with the drug cisplatin, while tumors with functional MK2 kept growing after treatment.
The findings suggest that giving cancer patients a combination of a DNA-damaging drug and an MK2 inhibitor could be very effective, says Michael Yaffe, the David H. Koch Professor in Science and senior author of a paper describing the research in the Nov. 14 issue of the journal Cell Reports.
Several drugs that inhibit MK2 are now in clinical trials to treat inflammatory diseases such as arthritis and colitis, but the drugs have never been tested as possible cancer treatments.
"What our study really says is that these drugs could have an entirely new second life, in combination with chemotherapy," says Yaffe, who is a member of MIT's Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research. "We're very much hoping it will go into clinical trials" for cancer.
Sandra Morandell, a postdoc at the Koch Institute, is the paper's lead author.
To kill a tumor
P53 is a tumor-suppressor protein that controls cell division. Before cell division begins, p53 checks the cell's DNA and initiates repair, if necessary. If DNA damage is too extensive, p53 forces the cell to undergo programmed cell death, or apoptosis. Tumors that lack p53 can avoid this fate.
"Usually p53 is the main driver of cell death, and if cells lose this pathway they become very resistant to different treatments that cause cell death," Morandell says.
Several years ago, researchers in Yaffe's lab discovered that in cancer cells with mutated p53, the MK2 gene helps counteract the effects of chemotherapy. When cancer cells suffer DNA damage, MK2 puts the brakes on the cell division cycle, giving cells time to repair the damage before dividing.
"Our data suggested if you block the MK2 pathway, tumor cells wouldn't recognize that they had DNA damage and they would keep trying to divide despite having DNA damage, and they would end up committing suicide," Yaffe says.
In the new study, the researchers wanted to see if this would hold true in tumors in living animals, as well as cells grown in a lab dish. To do that, they used a strain of mice that are genetically programmed to develop non-small-cell lung tumors. The researchers further engineered the mice so they could reversibly turn the MK2 gene on or off, allowing them to study tumors with and without MK2 in the same animal.
This new approach allows them, for the first time, to compare different types of tumors in the same mice, where all genetic factors are identical except for MK2 expression.
Using these mice, the researchers found that before treatment, tumors lacking both MK2 and p53 grow faster than tumors that have MK2. This suggests that treating tumors with an MK2 inhibitor alone would actually do more harm than good, possibly increasing the tumor's growth rate by taking the brake off the cell cycle.
However, when these tumors are treated with cisplatin, the tumors lacking MK2 shrink dramatically, while those with MK2 continue growing.
'A nonobvious combination'
The potential combination of cisplatin and MK2 inhibitors is unlike other chemotherapy combinations that have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration, which consist of pairs of drugs that each show benefit on their own. "What we found is a combination that you would never have arrived at otherwise," Yaffe says. "It's a nonobvious combination."
While this study focused on non-small-cell lung tumors, the researchers have gotten similar results in cancer cells grown in the lab from bone, cervical, and ovarian tumors. They are now studying mouse models of colon and ovarian cancer.
###
The research was funded by the Austrian Science Fund, the National Institutes of Health, Janssen Pharmaceutical, the Koch Institute, MIT's Center for Environmental Health Sciences, the Volkswagenstiftung, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the German Ministry for Science and Technology, the Deutsche Jose Carreras Leukämie Stiftung, and the Anna Fuller Fund.
Written by Anne Trafton, MIT News Office
Biologists ID new cancer weakness
2013-11-14
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Research identifies potential new treatment for sepsis
2013-11-14
Research identifies potential new treatment for sepsis
Sepsis is the leading cause of in-hospital death and there is no specific treatment for it. Now, research led by Dr. Qingping Feng of Western University (London, Canada) suggests a protein called recombinant ...
New genetic cause of Warburg Micro syndrome identified
2013-11-14
New genetic cause of Warburg Micro syndrome identified
A collaborative team of researchers led by researchers at the Medical College of Wisconsin and the University of Edinburgh has identified a gene responsible for Warburg Micro syndrome, a rare genetic disease ...
New approach advances wireless power transfer for electric vehicles
2013-11-14
New approach advances wireless power transfer for electric vehicles
Researchers from North Carolina State University have developed new technology and techniques for transmitting power wirelessly from a stationary source to a mobile receiver – moving engineers ...
Surprising image provides new tool for studying galaxy
2013-11-14
Surprising image provides new tool for studying galaxy
Chance superposition of 2 galaxies provides otherwise-unobtainable data
Astronomers studying gas halos around nearby galaxies were surprised when detailed studies with the National Science Foundation's ...
Genetic signature identified for RSV, the leading cause of infant hospitalizations worldwide
2013-11-14
Genetic signature identified for RSV, the leading cause of infant hospitalizations worldwide
Scientists have identified the genetic signature of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), the leading cause of infant hospitalizations around the ...
Hubble views an old and mysterious cluster
2013-11-14
Hubble views an old and mysterious cluster
The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has captured the best ever image of the globular cluster Messier 15, a gathering of very old stars that orbits the centre of the Milky Way. This glittering cluster ...
Glowing worms illuminate the roots of behavior
2013-11-14
Glowing worms illuminate the roots of behavior
A research team at Worcester Polytechnic Institute and The Rockefeller University has developed a novel method to image worm brain activity and screen early stage compounds aimed at treating autism and anxiety
Worcester, ...
Bleeding symptom leads scientists to intracellular trafficker's role in virus propagation
2013-11-14
Bleeding symptom leads scientists to intracellular trafficker's role in virus propagation
Rodent-borne pathogens like hantaviruses and arenaviruses are simple, but resourceful, and very successful at propagating. Due to a tiny genome generating a mere four ...
Cooking tips from Alton Brown: A new American Chemical Society video
2013-11-14
Cooking tips from Alton Brown: A new American Chemical Society video
— Have you ever wondered why some ice cubes are as clear as glass, or why bakers use sugar, even in savory breads? Celebrity chef Alton Brown answers these questions in the American Chemical ...
Antibiotic resistance is a international issue that better education can address
2013-11-14
Antibiotic resistance is a international issue that better education can address
Augusta, Ga. – Antibiotic resistance is an international reality whose solution includes better educating physicians about using bacteria-fighting tools, ...