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

Coloring tumors reveals their bad influence

Coloring tumors reveals their bad influence
2021-06-02
(Press-News.org) Studies on cancer are limited by the threshold at which cellular transformations become clinically detectable. However, the very initial phase on the way to malignancy is histologically invisible, as the process originates from one single cell. In this early phase, a so-called "seeding cell" acquires an initial pro-cancerous mutation, also known as the "first oncogenic hit", while being completely surrounded by normal tissue. To overcome the detection barrier, a team of researchers around IMBA group leader Bon-Kyoung Koo and University of Cambridge group leader Professor Benjamin D. Simons developed a laboratory system to dissect the pre-cancerous steps that remained under the radar up until present.

On the hunt for the roots of cancer "With the advance of technologies like deep targeted DNA sequencing, researchers noticed that cancer-associated mutations are already present in normal tissues, which is very scary!", states Bon-Kyoung Koo, referring to the turning point that set him, like a forensic detective, on the traces of the first oncogenic hit. As most human cancer types originate in the epithelium, Koo, a geneticist, decided to build a genetic model to examine the effect of the first oncogenic transformations in the mouse gut. This genetic model, that the team termed "Red2Onco", is a multi-colour labelling technology that allows to track the initiation of tumorigenesis from a single mutant cell. With Red2Onco, the team found that mutant cells create a hostile environment to their neighbouring non-mutant cells and massively deregulate the normal stem cell niche in the mouse intestinal tissue. "This is by far the most exciting approach that we have tried!", states Bon-Kyoung Koo.

Oncogenic factors and ruthless crosstalk mechanisms Using Red2Onco, the team was able to study the mechanisms initiated by two separate "first oncogenic hits". These are mutations to known proto-oncogenes, KRAS and PI3K, respectively, being known as pro-cancerous factors driving malignancy in declared tumours. To their surprise, the researchers found that even in the event of such a first oncogenic hit, the mutated pre-cancerous cell or "seeding cell" imparts a "negative influence" on its neighbours. The surrounding normal tissue loses its stem cells, which in turn favours the territorial expansion of oncogenic mutant stem cells and their progenies. "Through this process of 'field transformation', the colonization of intestinal tissue by mutant cells increases the chance for further oncogenic hits, which may lead in turn to cancer," explains Benjamin Simons of the Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge.

The first author on the study, Min Kyu Yum of the Gurdon Institute, expands: "oncogenic mutant cells influence the fate behaviour of their wild-type neighbours both directly, through secretion of signalling factors, and indirectly through induced changes in the shared tissue environment," before co-first author Seungmin Han sums up: "Using comparative single-cell analyses and organoid culture methods, we were able to dissect the molecular mechanisms that mediate cellular crosstalk".

The aggressive influence can be suppressed The relevance of the work is major, to say the least. In this sense, the authors have shown that inhibiting BMP (Bone Morphogenic Protein) signalling coming from the oncogenic mutant relieves the "negative influence" on the normal stem cells. "As well as enabling detection of early events of tumorigenesis, our discovery paves the way for intervention strategies that target cellular crosstalk mechanisms," concludes Min Kyu Yum.

INFORMATION:

Original publication: Yum MK, Han S et al., "Tracing oncogene-driven remodelling of the intestinal stem cell niche", Nature 2021. DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03605-0. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-021-03605-0

About IMBA IMBA - Institute of Molecular Biotechnology - is one of the leading biomedical research institutes in Europe focusing on cutting-edge stem cell technologies, functional genomics, and RNA biology. IMBA is located at the Vienna BioCenter, the vibrant cluster of universities, research institutes and biotech companies in Austria. IMBA is a subsidiary of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, the leading national sponsor of non-university academic research. The stem cell and organoid research at IMBA is being funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Science and the City of Vienna.

About the Gurdon Institute The Wellcome/Cancer Research UK Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge, is a world-leading centre for research into the biology of development and how normal growth and maintenance go wrong in diseases such as cancer.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Coloring tumors reveals their bad influence

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Urban crime fell by over a third around the world during COVID-19 shutdowns, study suggests

2021-06-02
A team of researchers led by the University of Cambridge and University of Utrecht examined trends in daily crime counts before and after COVID-19 restrictions were implemented in major metropolitan areas such as Barcelona, Chicago, Sao Paulo, Tel Aviv, Brisbane and London. While both stringency of lockdowns and the resulting crime reductions varied considerably from city to city, the researchers found that most types of crime - with the key exception of homicide - fell significantly in the study sites. Across all 27 cities, daily assaults fell ...

Income level, literacy, and access to health care rarely reported in clinical trials

2021-06-02
Clinical trials published in high-profile medical journals rarely report on income or other key sociodemographic characteristics of study participants, according to a new study that suggests these gaps may create blind spots when it comes to health care, especially for disadvantaged populations. The study, publishing June 2 in JAMA Network Open, analyzed 10 per cent of 2,351 randomized clinical trials published in New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA, The BMJ, The Lancet and Annals of Internal Medicine between Jan. 1, 2014 and July 31, 2020. The most commonly reported sociodemographic variables were sex and gender (in 98.7 per cent of trials) and race/ethnicity (in 48.5 per cent). All other sociodemographic ...

Salps fertilize the Southern Ocean more effectively than krill

2021-06-02
Experts at the Alfred Wegener Institute have, for the first time, experimentally measured the release of iron from the fecal pellets of krill and salps under natural conditions and tested its bioavailability using a natural community of microalgae in the Southern Ocean. In comparison to the fecal pellets of krill, Antarctic phytoplankton can more easily take up the micronutrient iron from those produced by salps. Observations made over the past 20 years show that, as a result of climate change, Antarctic krill are increasingly being supplanted by salps in the Southern Ocean. In the future, salps could more effectively stimulate the fixation of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide in Antarctic microalgae than krill, as the team of researchers report ...

Protein disguise could be new target for cancer immunotherapy

2021-06-02
Peer reviewed Experimental study / Meta-analysis Animals / Human data Protein disguise could be new target for cancer immunotherapy Researchers at the Francis Crick Institute have identified a protein that helps tumours evade the immune system and, in certain types of cancers, is linked to a poorer chance of survival. The protein could become a target for future cancer treatments. A crucial part of the immune system's response to cancer is a group of white blood cells, called CD8+ T-cells, which kill tumour cells. Before they launch their anti-tumour response, these cells must be told who to attack by another immune cell, ...

Less aviation during the global lockdown had a positive impact on the climate

Less aviation during the global lockdown had a positive impact on the climate
2021-06-02
They studied the extent to which cirrus clouds caused by aircraft occurred during the global hard lockdown between March and May 2020, and compared the values with those during the same period in previous years. The study was led by Johannes Quaas, Professor of Theoretical Meteorology at Leipzig University, and has now been published in the renowned journal "Environmental Research Letters". Cirrus clouds, known for their high, wispy strands, contribute to warming the climate. When cirrus clouds occur naturally, large ice crystals form at an altitude of about 36 kilometres, in turn reflecting sunlight back into space - albeit ...

The feasibility of transformation pathways for achieving the Paris Climate Agreement

2021-06-02
What drives the feasibility of climate scenarios commonly reviewed by organizations like the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)? And can they actually be achieved in practice? A new systematic framework can help understand what to improve in the next generation of scenarios and explore how to make ambitious emission reductions possible by strengthening enabling conditions. While the IPCC is in the midst of the drafting cycle of the Sixth Assessment Report, whose publication will start in the second half of 2021, there is an ongoing debate ...

Social media influencing grows more precarious in digital age

2021-06-02
ITHACA, N.Y. - Influencing millions of people on social media and being paid handsomely is not as easy as it looks, according to new Cornell University research. Algorithm vagaries are just one of several challenges social media content creators face, according to study author Brooke Erin Duffy, associate professor of communication at Cornell. "I think [our research] is a cautionary tale for aspiring creators as well as the broader public," Duffy said. "The people hoping to work as full-time YouTubers, Instagrammers, and TikTokers are led to believe it's easy and democratic. ...

Patients Taking Anti-Inflammatory Drugs Respond Less Well to COVID-19 Vaccine

2021-06-02
One-quarter of people who take the drug methotrexate for common immune system disorders -- from rheumatoid arthritis to multiple sclerosis -- mount a weaker immune response to a COVID-19 vaccine, a new study shows. Published (online May 25) recently in Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases, the study addressed disorders that result when the immune system, meant to fight disease and drive healing, is triggered abnormally. This in turn causes inflammation, the pain and swelling that come as immune cells rush into damaged or infected tissue, but often in the wrong amount or context. Called immune-mediated inflammatory disorders, they are typically treated ...

Plastic waste in the sea mainly drifts near the coast

2021-06-02
The pollution of the world's oceans with plastic waste is one of the major environmental problems of our time. However, very little is known about how much plastic is distributed globally in the ocean. Models based on ocean currents have so far suggested that the plastic mainly collects in large ocean gyres. Now, researchers at the University of Bern have calculated the distribution of plastic waste on a global scale while taking into account the fact that plastic can get beached. In their study, which has just been published in the "Environmental Research Letters" scientific journal, ...

Early exposure to cannabis compounds reduces later neural activity in zebrafish: study

2021-06-02
Zebrafish exposed to the leading cannabinoids found in cannabis in the earliest stages of development suffer a significant drop in neural activity later in life, according to a University of Alberta study that has implications for prenatal development in humans. Richard Kanyo, the lead author on the study and post-doctoral fellow in the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry, said despite the popular narrative that the health benefits of cannabis are many, it turns out there is a surprisingly large knowledge gap. "Once the legalization happened, people got really excited about it and there's a lot of bias in the media about positive ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UW-led research links wildfire smoke exposure with increased dementia risk

Most U.S. adults surveyed trust store-bought turkey is free of contaminants, despite research finding fecal bacteria in ground turkey

New therapy from UI Health offers FDA-approved treatment option for brittle type 1 diabetes

Alzheimer's: A new strategy to prevent neurodegeneration

A clue to what lies beneath the bland surfaces of Uranus and Neptune

Researchers uncover what makes large numbers of “squishy” grains start flowing

Scientists uncover new mechanism in bacterial DNA enzyme opening pathways for antibiotic development

New study reveals the explosive secret of the squirting cucumber

Vanderbilt authors find evidence that the hunger hormone leptin can direct neural development in a leptin receptor–independent manner

To design better water filters, MIT engineers look to manta rays

Self-assembling proteins can be used for higher performance, more sustainable skincare products

Cannabis, maybe, for attention problems

Building a better path to recovery for OUD

How climate change threatens this iconic Florida bird

Study reveals new factor involved in controlling calorie expenditure

Managing forests with smart technologies

Clinical trial finds that adding the chemotherapy pill temozolomide to radiation therapy improves survival in adult patients with a slow-growing type of brain tumor

H.E.S.S. collaboration detects the most energetic cosmic-ray electrons and positrons ever observed

Novel supernova observations grant astronomers a peek into the cosmic past

Association of severe maternal morbidity with subsequent birth

Herodotus' theory on Armenian origins debunked by first whole-genome study

Women who suffer pregnancy complications have fewer children

Home testing kits and coordinated outreach substantially improve colorectal cancer screening rates

COVID-19 vaccine reactogenicity among young children

Generalizability of clinical trials of novel weight loss medications to the US adult population

Wildfire smoke exposure and incident dementia

Health co-benefits of China's carbon neutrality policies highlighted in new review

Key brain circuit for female sexual rejection uncovered

Electrical nerve stimulation eases long COVID pain and fatigue

ASTRO issues update to clinical guideline on radiation therapy for rectal cancer

[Press-News.org] Coloring tumors reveals their bad influence