(Press-News.org) Contact information: Mark Derewicz
mark.derewicz@unch.unc.edu
919-923-0959
University of North Carolina Health Care
UNC scientists find potential cause for deadly breast cancer relapse
UNC scientists find potential cause for deadly breast cancer relapse
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Researchers at the UNC School of Medicine, working with cell lines in a lab, have discovered why some of the most aggressive and fatal breast cancer cells are resistant to chemotherapy, and UNC scientists are developing ways to overcome such resistance.
Adriana S. Beltran, PhD, a research assistant professor in the department of pharmacology, found that the protein Engrailed 1 is overexpressed in basal-like carcinomas and designed a chain of amino acids to shut down the protein and kill basal-like tumors in the lab.
"Patients with basal-like breast cancer tend to initially respond well to chemotherapy, but it's common for patients to relapse even more aggressively," said Beltran, the first author of a paper published in the journal Oncogene. "We believe that relapse is caused by a small number of cancer cells that have stem cell properties that allow them to survive chemotherapy. In these cells we've identified the overexpression of Engrailed 1."
Beltran and her colleagues – UNC pharmacologist Lee Graves, PhD, and former UNC pharmacologist Pilar Blancafort, PhD – discovered that Engrailed 1 is not involved in the rapid proliferation of cells that cause tumor growth. Nor is Engrailed 1 present in luminal tumors – the most common form of breast cancer. The culprit protein only appears in basal-like breast cancer.
In fact, Engrailed 1 is normally confined to the brain, where it protects neurons from cell death and helps maintain their normal activity. The absence of the protein in the brain has been linked to the onset of Parkinson's disease. But there is no known function of Engrailed 1 within breast tissue.
"We think that Engrailed 1 confers protective features to breast cancer cells, similar to the features observed in long-lived neurons," Beltran said. "This may explain why these cells survive and become resistant to chemotherapy in our experiments."
The researchers found Engrailed 1 through a series of experiments designed to find genes highly expressed in basal-like cells but not in luminal breast cancers. They discovered that Engrailed 1was most highly expressed in cell lines isolated from inflammatory breast cancer. Working with the UNC Michael Hooker Proteomics Center, Beltran and colleagues also determined that Engrailed 1 was associated with the gene EPRS, which expresses an enzyme that controls messenger RNA and protein synthesis, particularly in proteins involved with inflammation.
"Inflammation is associated with cancer development," Beltran said. "It's interesting to us that Engrailed 1, alone, is able to control inflammatory responses that may promote more aggressive forms of cancer."
Why Engrailed 1 is manifested in cancerous breast tissue remains a mystery. "Nature seems to always find a way," Beltran said. "Cancer cells are part of nature; everything in nature strives to survive."
But Beltran and her colleagues might have found a way to stop Engrailed 1. After studying how Engrailed 1 binds to DNA and other proteins, the researchers created a synthetic peptide – a chain of amino acids – that can stifle the binding power of Engrailed 1. In cell lines – not in animals or patients – Beltran and colleagues used their peptide to disrupt Engrailed 1 from binding to its protein partners and DNA.
"Cancer cells need Engrailed 1 to live," Beltran said. "The peptide abolishes all interactions of Engrailed 1, and as a consequence Engrailed 1 cannot perform its functions, causing rapid cell death of the cancer cell.
"The goal now is to validate our findings in animal models."
If Engrailed 1 turns out to be as critical to basal-like metastasis as it seems from this basic research, then a drug could be developed to fight cancer relapse in some of most deadly forms of breast cancer.
###
The National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense funded this research. Adriana Beltran is now a research assistant professor in the lab of UNC pharmacologist Gary Johnson, PhD. Lee Graves is an associate professor in the Department of Pharmacology. Pilar Blancafort is now an associate professor at the University of Western Australia. Graves and Blancafort are members of Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center.
UNC scientists find potential cause for deadly breast cancer relapse
UNC scientists find potential cause for deadly breast cancer relapse
2013-11-25
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Mayo Clinic researchers: Improvement of mood associated with improved brain injury outcomes
2013-11-25
Mayo Clinic researchers: Improvement of mood associated with improved brain injury outcomes
ROCHESTER, Minn. — Mayo Clinic researchers found that improvement of mood over the course of post-acute brain rehabilitation is associated with increased participation in day-to-day ...
Video game play may provide learning, health, social benefits, review finds
2013-11-25
Video game play may provide learning, health, social benefits, review finds
Authors suggest balancing questions of harm with potential for positive impact
WASHINGTON – Playing video games, including violent shooter games, may boost children's learning, health ...
2-way traffic enable proteins to get where needed, avoid disease
2013-11-25
2-way traffic enable proteins to get where needed, avoid disease
Augusta, Ga. - It turns out that your messenger RNA may catch more than one ride to get where it's going.
Scientists have found that mRNA may travel one way down a cell, ...
University Of Massachusetts Medical School scientists re-imagine how genomes are assembled
2013-11-25
University Of Massachusetts Medical School scientists re-imagine how genomes are assembled
Using DNA interaction frequency data, UMMS faculty develop quicker, more accurate method for assembling complex genome sequences
WORCESTER, MA ...
Drug interactions causing a significant impact on statin use
2013-11-25
Drug interactions causing a significant impact on statin use
CORVALLIS, Ore. – A new study has found that many people who stopped taking cholesterol-lowering statin drugs were also taking an average of three other drugs that interfered with the normal metabolism of the statins.
The ...
NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Alessia make landfall near Darwin
2013-11-25
NASA sees Tropical Cyclone Alessia make landfall near Darwin
Tropical Cyclone made landfall near Darwin, Australia on November 24 as a weak tropical storm as NASA's TRMM satellite passed overhead and measured its rainfall.
The final warning on the tropical storm ...
Turning autism upside down: When symptoms are strengths
2013-11-25
Turning autism upside down: When symptoms are strengths
Alternative treatment focuses on controlling the 'fight or flight' response
A novel approach to treating children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder could help them navigate their world by teaching ...
Rain as acidic as lemon juice may have contributed to ancient mass extinction
2013-11-25
Rain as acidic as lemon juice may have contributed to ancient mass extinction
MIT researchers find that rain as acidic as lemon juice may have contributed to massive die-offs on land 252 million years ago
Rain as acidic as undiluted lemon juice may have ...
Broken cellular 'clock' linked to brain damage
2013-11-25
Broken cellular 'clock' linked to brain damage
A new discovery may help explain the surprisingly strong connections between sleep problems and neurodegenerative conditions such as Alzheimer's disease.
Sleep loss increases the risk of Alzheimer's ...
Research: Materialism makes bad events even worse
2013-11-25
Research: Materialism makes bad events even worse
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — In addition to its already well-documented negative direct effects on a person's well-being, materialism also wields an indirect negative effect by making bad events even ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Six University of Tennessee faculty among world’s most highly cited researchers
A type of immune cell could hold a key to preventing scar tissue buildup in wounds
Mountains as water towers: New research highlights warming differences between high and low elevations
University of Tennessee secures $1 million NSF grant to build semiconductor workforce pipeline
Biochar shows powerful potential to build cleaner and more sustainable cities worldwide
UT Health San Antonio leads $4 million study on glucagon hormone’s role in diabetes, obesity
65-year-old framework challenged by modern research
AI tool helps visually impaired users ‘feel’ where objects are in real time
Collaborating minds think alike, processing information in similar ways in a shared task
Routine first trimester ultrasounds lead to earlier detection of fetal anomalies
Royal recognition for university’s dementia work
It’s a bird, it’s a drone, it’s both: AI tech monitors turkey behavior
Bormioli Luigi renews LionGlass deal with Penn State after successful trial run
Are developers prepared to control super-intelligent AI?
A step toward practical photonic quantum neural networks
Study identifies target for disease hyper progression after immunotherapy in kidney cancer
Concordia researchers identify key marker linking coronary artery disease to cognitive decline
HER2-targeted therapy shows promising results in rare bile duct cancers
Metabolic roots of memory loss
Clinical outcomes and in-hospital mortality rate following heart valve replacements at a tertiary-care hospital
Too sick to socialize: How the brain and immune system promote staying in bed
Seal milk more refined than breast milk
Veterans with cardiometabolic conditions face significant risk of dying during extreme heat events
How plants search for nutrients
Prefrontal cortex reaches back into the brain to shape how other regions function
Much-needed new drug approved for deadliest blood cancer
American College of Lifestyle Medicine publishes official position on lifestyle medicine as a framework for delivery of high-value, whole-person care
Hospital infections associated with higher risk of dementia
Thyroid dysfunction during pregnancy may increase autism risk in children
Cross-national willingness to share
[Press-News.org] UNC scientists find potential cause for deadly breast cancer relapseUNC scientists find potential cause for deadly breast cancer relapse