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

Many cancer cells found to have an 'eat me' signal in Stanford study

2010-12-23
(Press-News.org) STANFORD, Calif. — Researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine have discovered that many cancer cells carry the seeds of their own destruction — a protein on the cell surface that signals circulating immune cells to engulf and digest them. On cancer cells, this "eat me" signal is counteracted by a separate "don't eat me" signal that was described in an earlier study. The two discoveries may lead to better cancer therapies, and also solve a mystery about why a previously reported cancer therapy is not more toxic.

In the study to be published Dec. 22 in Science Translational Medicine, the researchers discovered that many forms of cancer display the protein calreticulin, or CRT, which invites immune cells called macrophages to engulf and destroy them. The reason most cancer cells are not destroyed by macrophages is that they also display another molecule, a "don't eat me" signal, called CD47, which counteracts the CRT signal.

The characterization of the function of CD47 protein in cancer was previously published by the Stanford scientists. In the earlier work, they reported that an antibody that blocks CD47 could be a potent anti-cancer therapy. They demonstrated that the anti-CD47 antibody could eliminate disease in mice transplanted with human acute myeloid leukemia and cure a large proportion of mice with human non-Hodgkin's lymphoma when combined with a second antibody.

Although the result was exciting, it presented a couple mysteries. "Many normal cells in the body have CD47, and yet those cells are not affected by the anti-CD47 antibody," said Mark Chao, a Stanford MD/PhD candidate who is first author of the new paper. "At that time, we knew that anti-CD47 antibody treatment selectively killed only cancer cells without being toxic to most normal cells, although we didn't know why."

The researchers also questioned whether simply blocking CD47 would be enough to bring on a cell's destruction. "It wouldn't be likely that killing cells was the default action of the immune system," said Ravindra Majeti, MD, PhD, assistant professor of hematology and co-principal investigator on the project. "We postulated that there had to be an 'eat me' signal that the cancer cells were also carrying in addition to CD47." CRT became the leading candidate for this signal because other researchers had previously shown that CRT and CD47 work together to govern a process of programmed cell death called apoptosis.

Indeed, when the scientists looked for CRT they found it on a variety of cancers, including several leukemias, non-Hodgkin's lymphoma and bladder, brain and ovarian cancers. "This research demonstrates that the reason that blocking the CD47 'don't eat me' signal works to kill cancer is that leukemias, lymphomas and many solid tumors also display a calreticulin 'eat me' signal," said Irving Weissman, MD, director of the Stanford Institute for Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine and the study's other co-principal investigator. "The research also shows that most normal cell populations don't display calreticulin and are therefore not depleted when we expose them to a blocking anti-CD47 antibody."

The researchers also found that the most aggressive cancers were the ones making the most CRT. This raises hopes that some of the worst cancers may be the most vulnerable to therapies targeting CD47 and CRT.

But it also raises new mysteries: Why would cancer cells carry a protein that invites their own destruction, and why would the worst cancers make more of this protein? One possibility is that CRT is a part of the cell's regulatory system that cancers have figured a way around. When normal cells become damaged, CRT protein gets exposed on the cell surface, which marks the cell to be eaten and ultimately destroyed. This is one of many ways the immune system keeps abnormal cells in check. "In cancer, CRT expression may be a marker of this process, requiring cancer cells to make more CD47 to avoid getting eaten," said Chao. "It's also possible that CRT confers some unknown advantage on cancer, which is an area we are actively investigating."

One next step for the researchers will be to understand how CRT and CD47 dynamically balance each other's influence in patients undergoing chemotherapy, the standard treatment for most cancers. This may provide greater chances of success as they move toward a clinical trial of the anti-CD47 antibody in cancer patients.

The scientists also want to learn more about the biology of CRT in cancer. "We want to know how it contributes to the disease process and what is happening in the cell that causes the protein to move to the cell surface," Majeti said. "Any of these mechanisms offer potential new ways to treat the disease by interfering with those processes."

INFORMATION: Other Stanford investigators contributing to this research were pathology resident Siddhartha Jaiswal, MD, PhD; high school student Rachel Weissman-Tsukamoto; acting assistant professor of medicine Ash Alizadeh, MD, PhD; postdoctoral scholars Andrew Gentles, PhD, Jens Volkmer, MD, Stephen Willingham, PhD, and Tal Raveh, PhD; and medical student Kipp Weiskopf.

The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the American Association for Cancer Research and the Ludwig Foundation. Information about Stanford's Department of Medicine, which also supported the work, is available at http://medicine.stanford.edu.

The Stanford University School of Medicine consistently ranks among the nation's top medical schools, integrating research, medical education, patient care and community service. For more news about the school, please visit http://mednews.stanford.edu. The medical school is part of Stanford Medicine, which includes Stanford Hospital & Clinics and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital. For information about all three, please visit http://stanfordmedicine.org/about/news.html.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

What sex are you?

2010-12-23
Sex in mammals is genetically determined. In humans, females have two X chromosomes, while males have one X and one Y chromosome. However, some individuals are born with male genitalia despite having two X chromosomes, a condition known as XX male sex reversal. A team of researchers, led by Paul Thomas, University of Adelaide, Australia, has now determined that overexpression of the Sox3 gene in mice causes frequent XX male sex reversal. The clinical relevance of this was highlighted by the discovery of genomic rearrangements in the regulatory region of the human SOX3 gene ...

KISSing a theory goodbye in the link between puberty and nutrition status

2010-12-23
The timing of the onset of puberty is linked to levels of nutrition: later onset is associated with malnutrition, while earlier onset is linked to childhood obesity. A team of researchers, led by Carol Elias, at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, has now generated data in mice that run counter to current thinking about the molecular pathway by which nutrition status affects the onset of puberty. Further, the team defines a new regulatory pathway for the process, which, if confirmed in humans, could potentially lead to new approaches to treating ...

Picking a poison for brain tumors: Arsenic

2010-12-23
Arsenic is usually thought of as a poison. Despite this, it has been used in medicine for over 2000 years, and the arsenic compound arsenic trioxide (ATO) is FDA approved for the treatment of acute promyelocytic leukemia. Now, a team of researchers, led by Aykut Üren, at Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, has generated data using human cancer cell lines that suggest that ATO might also be of benefit to individuals with certain brain tumors or connective tissue tumors. Certain cancers, in particular brain tumors known as medulloblastomas and connective tissue ...

NIH-led study identifies genetic variant that can lead to severe impulsivity

2010-12-23
A multinational research team led by scientists at the National Institutes of Health has found that a genetic variant of a brain receptor molecule may contribute to violently impulsive behavior when people who carry it are under the influence of alcohol. A report of the findings, which include human genetic analyses and gene knockout studies in animals, appears in the Dec. 23 issue of Nature. "Impulsivity, or action without foresight, is a factor in many pathological behaviors including suicide, aggression, and addiction," explains senior author David Goldman, M.D., ...

How past experiences inform future choices

2010-12-23
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—Researchers at MIT's Picower Institute for Learning and Memory report for the first time how animals' knowledge obtained through past experiences can subconsciously influence their behavior in new situations. The work, which sheds light on how our past experiences inform our future choices, will be reported on Dec. 22 in an advance online publication of Nature. Previous work has shown that when a mouse explores a new space, neurons in its hippocampus, the center of learning and memory, fire sequentially like gunpowder igniting a makeshift fuse. Individual ...

Mammalian aging process linked to overactive cellular pathway

2010-12-23
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (December 22, 2010) – Whitehead Institute researchers have linked hyperactivity in the mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) cellular pathway, to reduced ketone production, which is a well-defined physiological trait of aging in mice. Their results are reported in the December 23 edition of the journal Nature. "This is the first paper that genetically shows that the mTORC1 pathway in mammals affects an aging phenotype," says Whitehead Institute Member David Sabatini. "It provides us with a molecular framework to study an aging-related process ...

Fossil finger bone yields genome of a previously unknown human relative

2010-12-23
SANTA CRUZ, CA--A 30,000-year-old finger bone found in a cave in southern Siberia came from a young girl who was neither an early modern human nor a Neanderthal, but belonged to a previously unknown group of human relatives who may have lived throughout much of Asia during the late Pleistocene epoch. Although the fossil evidence consists of just a bone fragment and one tooth, DNA extracted from the bone has yielded a draft genome sequence, enabling scientists to reach some startling conclusions about this extinct branch of the human family tree, called "Denisovans" after ...

JCI table of contents: Dec. 22, 2010

2010-12-23
EDITOR'S PICK: What sex are you? Sex in mammals is genetically determined. In humans, females have two X chromosomes, while males have one X and one Y chromosome. However, some individuals are born with male genitalia despite having two X chromosomes, a condition known as XX male sex reversal. A team of researchers, led by Paul Thomas, University of Adelaide, Australia, has now determined that overexpression of the Sox3 gene in mice causes frequent XX male sex reversal. The clinical relevance of this was highlighted by the discovery of genomic rearrangements in the regulatory ...

Mortality rates are an unreliable metric for assessing hospital quality, study finds

2010-12-23
BOSTON (December 22, 2010) -- Is quality in the eye of the beholder? Researchers at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital have found wide disparities among four common measures of hospital-wide mortality rates, with competing methods yielding both higher- and lower-than-expected rates for the same Massachusetts hospitals during the same year. The findings, published Dec. 23 in a special article in the New England Journal of Medicine, stoke a simmering debate over the value of hospital-wide mortality rates as a yardstick for health care quality. ...

Genome of extinct Siberian human sheds new light on modern human origins

2010-12-23
BOSTON, Mass. (December 22, 2010) — The sequencing of the nuclear genome from an ancient finger bone found in a Siberian cave shows that the cave dwellers were neither Neandertals nor modern humans. An international team of researchers led by Svante Pääbo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig (Germany) has sequenced the nuclear genome from a finger bone of an extinct hominin that is at least 30,000 years old and was excavated by archaeologists from the Russian Academy of Sciences in Denisova Cave in southern Siberia, Russia, in 2008. A ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

NASA selects BAE systems to develop air quality instrument for NOAA

For microscopic organisms, ocean currents act as 'expressway' to deeper depths, study finds

Rice’s Harvey, Ramesh named to National Academy of Sciences

Oil palm plantations are driving massive downstream impact to watershed

Nanotubes, nanoparticles, and antibodies detect tiny amounts of fentanyl

New eco-friendly lubricant additives protect turbine equipment, waterways

Monoclonal Antibodies in Immunodiagnosis and Immunotherapy appoints new Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Andrei Moroz, PhD

Optical pumped magnetometer magnetocardiography as a potential method of therapy monitoring in fulminant myocarditis

Heart failure registries in Asia – what have we learned?

Study helps understand how energy metabolism is regulated at cellular level

Stay active – or get active – to boost quality of life while aging, study suggests to middle-aged women

*FREE* Friendship-nomination approach identifies key villagers to diffuse health messages

Chromosomal 22q11.2 deletion confers risk for severe spina bifida

Circadian clocks in the brain and muscles coordinate to support daily muscle function

*FREE* The effectiveness of early childhood education programs is scientifically uncertain

Twisting and binding matter waves with photons in a cavity

Sugar-based catalyst upcycles carbon dioxide

Deeper understanding of malaria parasite sexual development unlocks opportunities to block disease spread

Breaking ground: Investigating the long-term effects of early childhood education

Synchronization between the central circadian clock and the circadian clocks of tissues preserves their functioning and prevents ageing

Physicists arrange atoms in extremely close proximity

Scientists track ‘doubling’ in origin of cancer cells

Human activity is causing toxic thallium to enter the Baltic sea, according to new study

NREL proof of concept shows path to easier recycling of solar modules

NREL invites robots to help make wind turbine blades

Scent sells – but the right picture titillates both eyes and nose, research finds

Low intensity light to fight the effects of chronic stress

Wildfires in wet African forests have doubled in recent decades

Dietary changes may treat pulmonary hypertension

UTA scientists test for quantum nature of gravity

[Press-News.org] Many cancer cells found to have an 'eat me' signal in Stanford study