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

Micro-RNA determines malignancy of lung cancer

2010-09-08
(Press-News.org) Cancer becomes life-threatening when tumor cells start leaving their primary site. They travel through the lymph and blood streams to other tissues where they grow into metastases. This transition to malignancy is associated with characteristic changes in the cancer cells. The activity of several genes is reprogrammed and, thus, the production of proteins anchoring cells to a tissue is reduced. On the other hand, the amount of surface markers which make a cancer cell mobile increases.

Professor Dr. Heike Allgayer heads a Clinical Cooperation Unit of DKFZ and UMM. She is an expert for those cellular processes that lead to metastasis in cancer. In recent years, scientists have discovered that production of many proteins is regulated by what are called micro-RNAs. These RNA molecules, which consist of only about 23 building blocks, attach specifically to messenger RNAs, which contain the blueprints for proteins. In this way, they block the production of the respective protein.

"We believe that micro-RNAs also play an important role in metastasis and that they program cells in a way that leads to malignant growth," medical researcher Heike Allgayer explains. In an international collaboration with researchers in Turin, Italy, Allgayer and her team used various cell lines of non-small cell lung cancer to investigate a particularly suspicious candidate called miR-200c and its role in malignant growth. The research team found out that the less miR-200c is produced by a cell line, the higher its motility and its capacity to invade surrounding tissue. When the researchers experimentally equipped the cancer cells with additional miR-200c, the amount of tissue-anchoring molecules on their surface increased and their invasive capacity became lower. In animal experiments, these cells produced less metastasis.

A dreaded characteristic of non-small cell lung cancer is its resistance to chemotherapy and targeted anticancer drugs. A lack of miR-200c also seems to play a role here. Therapy-resistant lung cancer cell lines that were experimentally equipped with miR-200c could subsequently be killed by the chemotherapy drug cisplatin and responded to cetuximab, a drug that block growth signals.

Allgayer's Team also discovered how the loss of miR-200c is brought about in cancer cells. In the highly aggressive cells, the miR-200c genes are turned off by chemical labeling with methyl groups. Drugs that remove these labels made the production of miR-200c rise again.

Studying the tumor cells of 69 lung cancer patients, the investigators realized that miR-200c not only plays a role in the culture dish. They determined miR-200c levels and compared these with the patients' disease progression data. The lower the miR-200c level in the cancer cells, the more frequently metastasis had already begun. "Our results clearly show a connection between a loss of miR-200c and transition to aggressive, invasive growth, metastasis and chemoresistance," Heike Allgayer summarizes. "Therefore, we will now investigate whether miR-200c production in cancer cells can be used for predicting metastasis and, thus, may serve as a prognosis factor for the progression of a lung cancer. It is also possible that the miR-200c level can help to better predict the effectiveness of particular drugs."

INFORMATION:

Paolo Ceppi, Giridhar Mudduluru, Regalla Kumarswamy, Ida Rapa, Giorgio V. Scagliotti, Mauro Papotti and Heike Allgayer: Loss of miR-200c Expression Induces an Aggressive, Invasive, and Chemoresistant Phenotype in Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer. Molecular Cancer Research 2010, DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-10-0052

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

A nearby galactic exemplar

A nearby galactic exemplar
2010-09-08
Originally discovered from Australia by the Scottish astronomer James Dunlop early in the nineteenth century, NGC 300 is one of the closest and most prominent spiral galaxies in the southern skies and is bright enough to be seen easily in binoculars. It lies in the inconspicuous constellation of Sculptor, which has few bright stars, but is home to a collection of nearby galaxies that form the Sculptor Group [1]. Other members that have been imaged by ESO telescopes include NGC 55 (eso0914 - http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso0914/), NGC 253 (eso1025 - http://www.eso.org/public/news/eso1025/, ...

Chopping and changing in the microbial world: How mycoplasmas stay alive

2010-09-08
Mycoplasmas are responsible for a variety of important diseases, including atypical pneumonia in humans and mastitis in cows, sheep and goats, which results in loss of milk production. Mycoplasmal mastitis represents a particular problem in the dairy industry and is thus a subject of intense study. One of the most important mastitis agents in sheep and goats is Mycoplasma agalactiae, which has been under investigation by the group of Renate Rosengarten and Rohini Chopra-Dewasthaly at the Institute of Bacteriology, Mycology and Hygiene at the University of Veterinary Medicine, ...

Does the impact of psychological trauma cross generations?

2010-09-08
Philadelphia, PA, 8 September, 2010 - In groups with high rates of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), such as the survivors of the Nazi Death Camps, the adjustment problems of their children, the so-called "Second Generation", have received attention by researchers. Studies suggested that some symptoms or personality traits associated with PTSD may be more common in the Second Generation than the general population. It has been assumed that these trans-generational effects reflected the impact of PTSD upon the parent-child relationship rather than a trait passed biologically ...

Scientists make leap forward in early detection for Alzheimer's and cancer

2010-09-08
Scientists at the UK's National Physical Laboratory have developed a new strategy for quicker and more precise detection of biomarkers – proteins which indicate disease. The work could pave the way for new tools to detect early stages of Alzheimer's and cancer at the molecular level. All diseases have proteins specifically linked to them called biomarkers. Identifying these in body fluid such as blood can be a powerful tool in identifying diseases in their early stages. This would help doctors increase the success rate of treatment through early intervention and help ...

New American Chemical Society podcast: Economical biodiesel from sewage sludge

2010-09-08
WASHINGTON, Sept. 8, 2010 — Biodiesel fuel could be produced from municipal sewage sludge at a cost that is within a few cents a gallon of being competitive with conventional diesel refined from petroleum, according to the latest episode in the American Chemical Society's (ACS) award-winning podcast series, "Global Challenges/Chemistry Solutions." To boost biodiesel production, sewage treatment plants could use microorganisms that produce higher amounts of oil, says study leader David M. Kargbo, Ph.D., with the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).That step alone ...

ACP explores ethical issues for use of incentives to promote personal responsibility for health

2010-09-08
PHILADELPHIA, September 8, 2010 -- The American College of Physicians (ACP) today released a new position paper that provides ethical guidance for using incentives to promote personal responsibility for health. In "Ethical Considerations for the Use of Patient Incentives to Promote Personal Responsibility for Health: West Virginia Medicaid and Beyond (http://www.acponline.org/running_practice/ethics/issues/policy/personal_incentives.pdf)," ACP stresses that innovative programs designed to motivate behavior change should be part of a comprehensive strategy for well-being ...

Tips from the journals of the American Society for Microbiology

2010-09-08
Frog Skin May Provide Antimicrobial Peptides Effective Against Multidrug-Resistant Infections Antimicrobial peptides from the skin of frogs may protect against life-threatening, multidrug-resistant infections such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa say researchers from Italy. They detail their findings in the September 2010 issue of the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy. P. aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen that causes some of the most prevalent life-threatening infections such as eye and ear infections, burn wound infections and lung infections in cystic ...

Study shows nano-architectured aluminum has steely strength

2010-09-08
A North Carolina State University researcher and colleagues have figured out a way to make an aluminum alloy, or a mixture of aluminum and other elements, just as strong as steel. That's important, says Dr. Yuntian Zhu, professor of materials science and the NC State researcher involved in the project, because the search for ever lighter – yet stronger – materials is crucial to devising everything from more fuel-efficient cars to safer airplanes. In a paper published in the journal Nature Communications, Zhu and his colleagues describe the new nanoscale ...

USDA scientists, cooperators create the first genomic map of the domesticated turkey

2010-09-08
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) researchers and their university colleagues have sequenced the majority of the genome of Meleagris gallopavo, the domesticated turkey, creating the first-ever turkey genome map. The nearly complete map could help growers to more efficiently produce bigger, meatier turkeys. The research is reported today in PLoS Biology, an online journal of the Public Library of Science. Americans consume about 17.6 pounds of turkey per capita every year, and the U.S. produces nearly 6 billion pounds of turkey meat annually. "Turkey is the fourth ...

Turning a new page on antibiotics

2010-09-08
For 70 years the world has mismanaged the common good of antibiotics. The result is a growing global burden of antibiotic resistance, threatening to take health care back to an era where ordinary infections might once again become fatal. At a historic three day conference at Uppsala University, Sweden, 190 delegates representing 45 countries and many leading stake holders – civil society, academia, industry, governments, authorities, supranational organizations – agreed on Wednesday to turn a new page and move towards concerted action on antibiotic resistance. "This ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Age, previous sports experience, stronger predictors of performance in children than previous concussions, York U study finds

Dogs with meningiomas live longer with radiation therapy than surgery, Texas A&M researchers find

Pregnancy-related proteins in tumors linked to worse survival in female lung cancer patients

New study highlights success of financial toxicity tumor board in reducing cancer treatment costs 

CAD/CAM shows clinical benefits in jaw reconstruction, reports Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery

Missed school is an overlooked consequence of climate change

Reasons why anxiety and depression promote low self-belief revealed

UMass Amherst graduate student’s discovery shows that even neutral molecules take sides when it comes to biochemistry

Electroactive biofiltration dynamic membrane: A new hope for wastewater treatment

Disparities in breast reconstruction persist after ACA, reports Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery

Making magnetic biomaterials

Synchrotron in a closet: Bringing powerful 3D X-ray microscopy to smaller labs

Multiscale fibrous reinforcements yield high-performance construction composite

Using “shallow shadows” to uncover quantum properties

China’s EV ultrafast charging stations: Challenges, solutions, and costs

AACR: New CAR T cell therapy benefits patients with advanced thyroid cancers

AcrOSS platform: Advancing safe UAS operations in critical areas

Quantum computing paves the way for low-carbon building operations

HonorHealth Research Institute presents new findings in decades-long quest to conquer aggressive pancreatic cancer

HonorHealth Research Institute is the first of 50 sites worldwide to treat a patient in a new clinical study aimed at melanoma

Surviving cancer, still suffering: Survey reveals gaps in follow‑up care

A scientific method for flawless cacio e pepe

Uptake of and disparities in semaglutide and tirzepatide prescribing for obesity in the US

Bridging the AI gap in medicine: new framework targets family doctor education

Prenatal and perinatal factors of life’s essential 8 cardiovascular health trajectories

Maternal hypertension and adverse neurodevelopment in a cohort of preterm infants

Menstrual cycle length changes following vaccination against influenza alone or with COVID-19

Study suggests dance and lullabies aren’t universal human behaviors

Feeling stressed may lead to worsened respiratory symptoms, decreased quality of life

Couple satisfaction linked to fewer cognitive issues with chemo

[Press-News.org] Micro-RNA determines malignancy of lung cancer