(Press-News.org) The shortage of oxygen, or hypoxia, created when rapidly multiplying kidney cancer cells outgrow their local blood supply can accelerate tumor growth by causing a nuclear protein called SPOP—which normally suppresses tumor growth—to move out of the nucleus to the cytoplasm, where it has the opposite effect, promoting rapid proliferation.
In the March 20, 2014, issue of the journal Cancer Cell, researchers from Chicago and Beijing describe the mechanisms that enable hypoxia to cause the overexpression of SPOP. They show that hypoxia also stimulates the shuttling of SPOP out of the nucleus, where it normally prevents tumor growth, to the cytoplasm, where it shuts down protective pathways that should restrict tumor growth.
This cytoplasmic accumulation of SPOP, the authors note, "is sufficient to convey tumorigenic properties onto otherwise non-tumorigenic cells."
"It becomes a vicious cycle," said the study's senior author Kevin White, PhD, professor of human genetics, and ecology and evolution, and director of the Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology at the University of Chicago. "In people with clear-cell renal cell carcinoma, hypoxia-inducible factors enter the nucleus and target the SPOP gene. SPOP gets overexpressed and misdirected to the cytoplasm, where it interferes with multiple systems designed to suppress tumor growth. This encourages tumor growth, leading to more hypoxia."
White and colleagues first recognized a role for SPOP (speckle-type POZ protein) as a biomarker for kidney cancer in 2009. They found that 99 percent of clear cell renal cell cancers (ccRCC, the most common type of kidney cancer) had elevated SPOP levels. So they began to study the connection between increased SPOP production and ccRCC.
Kidney cancer is a significant health problem. It is the eighth most common malignancy in the United States, causing almost 64,000 new cases in 2014 and nearly 14,000 deaths. Worldwide, it causes more than 200,000 new cases annually and 100,000 deaths.
The high mortality is linked to late detection. There are no good screening tests, so most kidney cancers are diagnosed late, only after there is blood in the urine. Approximately 30 percent of RCC patients in the U.S. have metastatic disease when first diagnosed and nearly half of the remaining 70 percent will develop metastases. The disease is highly resistant to chemotherapy.
Understanding how misplaced but not mutated SPOP contributes to cancer growth, the researchers hope, might point to new ways to intervene. Previous work from White's laboratory on the fruit-fly version of SPOP suggested that it was a key regulatory hub, one that influenced several cancer-related pathways.
When the researchers shifted their focus from flies to human cancers they found that the high levels of SPOP in the cytoplasm had a profound effect. It degraded multiple regulatory proteins there that ordinarily served to suppress tumor growth.
The most important was PTEN, a gene that is damaged or lost in several types of cancer. The researchers found that cells from tumor samples had consistently high levels of SPOP and low levels of PTEN. Normal tissues from the same patient had low SPOP and high PTEN. SPOP could also degrade several other tumor-suppressor proteins, removing additional barriers to rapid tumor growth.
"These results clearly demonstrate that SPOP is acting as a critical hub in a network involving multiple cancer-related pathways," the authors wrote. "In doing so, SPOP appears to be both necessary and sufficient for tumorigenic phenotypes."
"We found that this normal protein, found in the wrong place and acting in the wrong way, was sufficient to drive the formation of tumors," White said. "Just by putting SPOP into the cytoplasm, we got great big tumors. But we also saw that the cells get addicted to it. When we knock it down, they die. Our hope is that cytoplasmic SPOP might turn out to be a good drug target."
INFORMATION:
The National Institutes of Health, the Beijing Science Foundation, the Keck Foundation, the Chicago Community Trust and the Chicago Biomedical Consortium funded this study.
Additional authors include former University of Chicago Institute for Genomics and Systems Biology postdoc Jiang Liu and his team in Beijing that included Guoqiang Li, Weimin Ci, Ke Chen, Zhixiang Fan, Zhongqiang Guo, Jing Zhang, Yuqwen Qe, Lu Wang, Nin Zhuang, Xuesong Li, Liquon Zhou, Xianghong Li and Yong Tian; Shengdi Hu from University of California at San Francisco; Subhradip Karmakar, Ruby Dhar, Sandip Prasad, Carrie Rinker-Schaeffer, Scott Eggener and Thomas Stricker from the University of Chicago; and Matthew Calabrese, Edmund Watson and Brenda Schulman from St Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis.
Study reveals a major mechanism driving kidney cancer progression
Misplaced protein provides promising drug target
2014-03-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Passive acoustic monitoring reveals clues to minke whale calling behavior and movements
2014-03-20
Scientists using passive acoustic monitoring to track minke whales in the Northwest Atlantic have found clues in the individual calling behaviors and movements of this species. These findings, recently published online in the journal Behaviour, provide insight into one of the least studied baleen whales.
"Although we regularly observe minke whales in our Gulf of Maine surveys, we know very little about minke whale vocalizations and how they use sound in their behavioral and social interactions," said Denise Risch, lead author of the study and a marine mammal researcher ...
Size, personality matter in how Kalahari social spiders perform tasks
2014-03-20
At first glance, colonies of thousands of social spiders all look the same and are busy with the same tasks. Not so, says researchers Carl Keiser and Devin Jones of the University of Pittsburgh in the US, after carefully studying various gatherings of Stegodyphus dumicola social spiders of the Kalahari Desert in South Africa. The size and condition of a particular spider's body indicates which task it generally performs within a colony. In addition, neighboring colonies can have different "personalities" too, writes Keiser, lead author of a study published in Springer's ...
Swing voters hold more sway over candidates on economic issues
2014-03-20
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — New research from two University of Illinois economics professors who study election trends analyzes how polarization on social issues affects competing candidates' economic platforms.
In the paper, co-authors Stefan Krasa and Mattias Polborn develop a theory of candidate competition that accounts for the influence of both economic and cultural issues on individual voting behavior.
"Many pundits and academics have argued that political polarization, particularly on social and cultural issues, has increased in the U.S.," said Polborn, also a professor ...
UTMB researchers discover a way to potentially slow down Alzheimer's
2014-03-20
Researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston have discovered a way to potentially halt the progression of dementia caused by accumulation of a protein known as tau.
Normally, tau protein is involved in microtubule formation, which acts as a brain cell's transportation system for carrying nutrients in and waste out. In the absence of tau protein, brain cells become dysfunctional and eventually die.
In many forms of dementia, such as Alzheimer's disease and chronic traumatic encephalopathy caused by multiple concussions, the tau protein starts behaving ...
What singing fruit flies can tell us about quick decisions
2014-03-20
You wouldn't hear the mating song of the male fruit fly as you reached for the infested bananas in your kitchen. Yet, the neural activity behind the insect's amorous call could help scientists understand how you made the quick decision to pull your hand back from the tiny swarm.
Male fruit flies base the pitch and tempo of their mating song on the movement and behavior of their desired female, Princeton University researchers have discovered. In the animal kingdom, lusty warblers such as birds typically have a mating song with a stereotyped pattern. A fruit fly's song, ...
As age-friendly technologies emerge, experts recommend policy changes
2014-03-20
From smart phones to smart cars, both public and private entities must consider the needs of older adults in order to help them optimize the use of new technologies, according to the latest issue of Public Policy & Aging Report (PP&AR), titled "Aging and Technology: The Promise and the Paradox." A total of eight articles all from authors affiliated with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology AgeLab are featured.
"Remarkable technological advances are all around us, and leaders in the business and scientific communities are keenly aware of 'the aging of America' and ...
A braking system for immune responses
2014-03-20
The surface of immune system cells is home to a number of receptors which are able to detect pathogens. As soon as these receptors are activated, inflammation occurs and the body's defense mechanisms kick in. Immune cells also have receptors that regulate or even suppress immunological responses to prevent damage to individual cells.
There are other immune receptors that recognize endogenous substances that are released when tissue damage or cell death occurs. As such, the organism can defend itself even in cases where the damage caused by the pathogen, but not the pathogen ...
(Not too) few but capable
2014-03-20
Until the '50s, bluefin tuna fishing was a thriving industry in Norway, second only to sardine fishing. Every year, bluefin tuna used to migrate from the eastern Mediterranean up to the Norwegian coasts. Suddenly, however, over no more than 4-5 years, the tuna never went back to Norway. In an attempt to solve this problem, Giancarlo De Luca from SISSA (the International School for Advanced Studies of Trieste) together with an international team of researchers (from the Centre for Theoretical Physics - ICTP – of Trieste and the Technical University of Denmark) started to ...
Inhibition of CDK4 might promote lymphoma development and progression
2014-03-20
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Anticancer agents that inhibit tumor growth by targeting a regulatory protein called CDK4 might actually promote the development and progression of certain B-cell lymphomas, according to a new study led by researchers at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center – Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital and Richard J. Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC – James).
The study indicates that inhibiting CDK4, a regulator of the cell cycle, promotes genetic instability and the development or progression of B-cell lymphomas that are driven by the MYC oncogene.
The ...
Thoughtful people more likely to infer improvements in race relations
2014-03-20
According to a recent Pew Research poll, a majority of Americans believe that there is still at least some racism against African Americans in this country. But new research by Jane L. Risen of the University of Chicago Booth School of Business shows that people are more likely to deny the persistence of racism after being exposed to a successful African American. Notably, people who are most thoughtful seem to be the ones who are most vulnerable to making these quick inferences.
In "If He Can Do It, So Can They: Exposure to Counterstereotypically Successful Exemplars ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
MIT Press’s Direct to Open reaches annual funding goal for 2025, opens access to 80 new monographs
New NCCN patient resource shares latest understanding of genetic testing to guide patient decision making
Synchronization in neural nets: Mathematical insight into neuron readout drives significant improvements in prediction accuracy
TLE6 identified as a protein associated with infertility in male mice
Thin lenses have a bright future
Volcanic eruption caused Neolithic people to sacrifice unique "sun stones"
Drug in clinical trials for breast cancer could also treat some blood cancers
Study identifies mechanism underlying increased osteoarthritis risk in postmenopausal females
The material revolution: How USA’s commodity appetite evolved from 1900 to present
Asteroid impact sulfur release less lethal in dinosaur extinction
Study shows seed impact mills clobber waterhemp seed viability
Study links rising suicidality among teen girls to increase in identifying as LGBQ
Mind’s eye: Pineal gland photoreceptor’s 2 genes help fish detect color
Nipah virus: epidemiology, pathogenesis, treatment, and prevention
FDA ban on Red Dye 3 and more are highlighted in Sylvester Cancer's January tip sheet
Mapping gene regulation
Exposure to air pollution before pregnancy linked to higher child body mass index, study finds
Neural partially linear additive model
Dung data: manure can help to improve global maps of herbivore distribution
Concerns over maternity provision for pregnant women in UK prisons
UK needs a national strategy to tackle harms of alcohol, argue experts
Aerobic exercise: a powerful ally in the fight against Alzheimer’s
Cambridge leads first phase of governmental project to understand impact of smartphones and social media on young people
AASM Foundation partners with Howard University Medical Alumni Association to provide scholarships
Protective actions need regulatory support to fully defend homeowners and coastal communities, study finds
On-chip light control of semiconductor optoelectronic devices using integrated metasurfaces
America’s political house can become less divided
A common antihistamine shows promise in treating liver complications of a rare disease complication
Trastuzumab emtansine improves long-term survival in HER2 breast cancer
Is eating more red meat bad for your brain?
[Press-News.org] Study reveals a major mechanism driving kidney cancer progressionMisplaced protein provides promising drug target