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

Taking out a cancer's co-dependency

Novel compound selectively kills cancer cells by blocking their response to oxidative stress

2011-07-14
(Press-News.org) A cancer cell may seem out of control, growing wildly and breaking all the rules of orderly cell life and death. But amid the seeming chaos there is a balance between a cancer cell's revved-up metabolism and skyrocketing levels of cellular stress. Just as a cancer cell depends on a hyperactive metabolism to fuel its rapid growth, it also depends on anti-oxidative enzymes to quench potentially toxic reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by such high metabolic demand.

Scientists at the Broad Institute and Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) have discovered a novel compound that blocks this response to oxidative stress selectively in cancer cells but spares normal cells, with an effectiveness that surpassed a chemotherapy drug currently used to treat breast cancer. Their findings, based on experiments in cell culture and in mice, appear online in Nature on July 13.

The plant-based compound piperlongumine (PL), derived from the fruit of a pepper plant found in southern India and southeast Asia, appears to kill cancer cells by jamming the machinery that dissipates high oxidative stress and the resulting ROS. Normal cells have low levels of ROS, in tune with their more modest metabolism, so they don't need high levels of the anti-oxidant enzymes that PL stymies once they pass a certain threshold.

"Piperlongumine targets something that's not thought to be essential in normal cells," said Stuart L. Schreiber, a senior co-author and director of the Broad's Chemical Biology Program. "Cancer cells have a greater dependence on ROS biology than normal cells."

Sam W. Lee and Anna Mandinova, senior co-authors from the Cutaneous Biology Research Center (CBRC) at MGH, weren't looking for a ROS inhibitor when they found PL. Their interest lay in the tumor suppressor gene p53, which is mutated in more than half of all cancer types. Teaming up with the Broad's Chemical Biology Program and Platform to screen libraries of chemical compounds, they were looking for something that might increase levels of the properly functioning p53 gene.

When they saw a promising signal for PL, they assumed it worked by enhancing the p53 gene. But to their surprise, PL induced cancer cell death independent of the tumor suppressor gene's activity. And when they tested PL in normal cells, the cells didn't die.

"The novelty of this compound was that it was able to recognize cancer cells from normal cells," said Mandinova, a Broad associate member and a faculty member at MGH and Harvard Medical School. "It has a mode of action that targets something especially important to the cancer cell."

Their second surprise came after the Proteomics Platform's quantitative analysis identified the target of PL. The researchers imagined that they might find a protein encoded by a cancer-causing gene was being inhibited in some way, but instead of an oncogene, they saw an indirect process on which cancer cells depend.

A small number of new cancer drugs target oncogenes directly, but this may not be the only promising new direction for treating cancers. Cancer genes do not act alone. PL exploits a dependency that develops after oncogenes transform normal cells into cancer cells.

"Our studies suggest that piperlongumine's ROS-associated mechanism is especially relevant to the transformed cancer cell," said co-author Andrew M. Stern, associate director of Novel Therapeutics at the Broad. "And this in part may underlie the observed selectivity of PL."

The scientists tested PL against cancer cells and normal cells engineered to develop cancer. In mice injected with human bladder, breast, lung, or melanoma cancer cells, PL inhibited tumor growth but showed no toxicity in normal mice. In a tougher test of mice that developed breast cancer spontaneously, PL blocked both tumor growth and metastasis. In contrast, the chemotherapy drug paclitaxel (Taxol) was less effective, even at high levels.

"This compound is selectively reducing the enzyme activity involved in oxidative stress balance in cancer cells, so the ROS level can go up above the threshold for cell death," said Lee, a Broad associate member and associate director of CBRC at MGH. "We hope we can use this compound as a starting point for the development of a drug so patients can benefit."

While hopeful, the authors remain cautious. Much more work needs to be done to better understand how the ROS process differs between normal and cancer cells before clinical studies can even be launched. Further studies will focus on different forms of cancer and their genotypes, or genetic information.

"Our next set of goals is to learn if there are specific cancer genotypes that will be more sensitive to this compound than others," said Alykhan F. Shamji, associate director of the Broad's Chemical Biology Program. "We hope our experiments will help be predictive of whether patients with the same genotypes in their tumors would respond the same way. It would help us to pick the right patients."

###

The research reported in Nature was funded by the National Cancer Institute and builds on work performed through the Initiative for Chemical Genetics and the Cancer Target Discovery and Development Network.

Paper cited: Raj L et al. Selective killing of cancer cells with a small molecule targeting stress response to ROS. Nature. Published online July 13, 2011. DOI: 10.1038/nature10167.

About the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT

The Eli and Edythe L. Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT was launched in 2004 to empower this generation of creative scientists to transform medicine. The Broad Institute seeks to describe all the molecular components of life and their connections; discover the molecular basis of major human diseases; develop effective new approaches to diagnostics and therapeutics; and disseminate discoveries, tools, methods and data openly to the entire scientific community.

Founded by MIT, Harvard and its affiliated hospitals, and the visionary Los Angeles philanthropists Eli and Edythe L. Broad, the Broad Institute includes faculty, professional staff and students from throughout the MIT and Harvard biomedical research communities and beyond, with collaborations spanning over a hundred private and public institutions in more than 40 countries worldwide. For further information about the Broad Institute, go to http://www.broadinstitute.org.

About Massachusetts General Hospital

Celebrating the 200th anniversary of its founding in 1811, Massachusetts General Hospital is the original and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The MGH conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the United States, with an annual research budget of nearly $700 million and major research centers in AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer, computational and integrative biology, cutaneous biology, human genetics, medical imaging, neurodegenerative disorders, reproductive biology, regenerative medicine, reproductive biology, systems biology, transplantation biology and photomedicine.

For more information, contact:

Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard
Nicole Davis
617.714.7152
ndavis@broadinstitute.org

Massachusetts General Hospital
Sue McGreevey
617.724.2764
smcgreevey@partners.org

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Case Western Reserve restores breathing after spinal cord injury in rodent model

2011-07-14
Contact: Christina DeAngelis christina.deangelis@case.edu 216-368-3635 Kevin Mayhood kevin.mayhood@case.edu 216-368-5004 Case Western Reserve University Case Western Reserve restores breathing after spinal cord injury in rodent model Study published in the online issue of Nature on July 14 CLEVELAND – July 13, 2011 –Researchers at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine bridged a spinal cord injury and biologically regenerated lost nerve connections to the diaphragm, restoring breathing in an adult rodent model of spinal cord injury. The work, which ...

Efficient process using microrna converts human skin cells into neurons, Stanford study shows

2011-07-14
STANFORD, Calif. — The addition of two particular gene snippets to a skin cell's usual genetic material is enough to turn that cell into a fully functional neuron, report researchers from the Stanford University School of Medicine. The finding, to be published online July 13 in Nature, is one of just a few recent reports of ways to create human neurons in a lab dish. The new capability to essentially grow neurons from scratch is a big step for neuroscience research, which has been stymied by the lack of human neurons for study. Unlike skin cells or blood cells, neurons ...

Penn study shows link between immune system suppression and blood vessel formation in tumors

2011-07-14
PHILADELPHIA - Targeted therapies that are designed to suppress the formation of new blood vessels in tumors, such as Avastin (bevacizumab), have slowed cancer growth in some patients. However, they have not produced the dramatic responses researchers initially thought they might. Now, research from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania might help to explain the modest responses. The discovery, published in the July 14 issue of Nature, suggests novel treatment combinations that could boost the power of therapies based on slowing blood vessel ...

New study confirms the existence of 'trial effect' in HIV clinical trials

2011-07-14
A new study by investigators from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine has confirmed the existence of a "trial effect" in clinical trials for treatment of HIV. Trial effect is an umbrella term for the benefit experienced by study participants simply by virtue of their participating in the trial. It includes the benefit of newer and more effective treatments, the way those treatments are delivered, increased care and follow-up, and the patient's own behavior change as a result of being under observation. "Trial effect is notoriously difficult ...

EzPaycheck Software Makes Changing to Computerized Payroll Quick and Painless for Small Businesses

EzPaycheck Software Makes Changing to Computerized Payroll Quick and Painless for Small Businesses
2011-07-14
Changing from running payroll by hand to computerized payroll can be quick and painless. Small business-focused payroll software developer Halfpricesoft.com announced the launch of new improved ezPaycheck payroll software and small business owners can get a free, 30-day trial by downloading ezPaycheck software from http://www.halfpricesoft.com/payroll_software_download.asp. This trial version contains all of the features and functions of the full version, except tax form printing, allowing customers to thoroughly test drive the product. Once customers are satisfied that ...

Diesel fumes pose risk to heart as well as lungs, study shows

2011-07-14
Tiny chemical particles emitted by diesel exhaust fumes could raise the risk of heart attacks, research has shown. Scientists have found that ultrafine particles produced when diesel burns are harmful to blood vessels and can increase the chances of blood clots forming in arteries, leading to a heart attack or stroke. The research by the University of Edinburgh measured the impact of diesel exhaust fumes on healthy volunteers at levels that would be found in heavily polluted cities. Scientists compared how people reacted to the gases found in diesel fumes – such as ...

New research demonstrates damaging influence of media on public perceptions of chimpanzees

2011-07-14
(Chicago, July 13, 2011)– How influential are mass media portrayals of chimpanzees in television, movies, advertisements and greeting cards on public perceptions of this endangered species? That is what researchers based at Chicago's Lincoln Park Zoo sought to uncover in a new nationwide study published today in in PLoS One, the open-access journal of the Public Library of Sciences. Their findings reveal the significant role that media plays in creating widespread misunderstandings about the conservation status and nature of this great ape. A majority of study respondents ...

Carnegie Mellon and Princeton neuroscientists uncover neural mechanisms of object recognition

Carnegie Mellon and Princeton neuroscientists uncover neural mechanisms of object recognition
2011-07-14
PITTSBURGH—Certain brain injuries can cause people to lose the ability to visually recognize objects — for example, confusing a harmonica for a cash register. Neuroscientists from Carnegie Mellon University and Princeton University examined the brain of a person with object agnosia, a deficit in the ability to recognize objects that does not include damage to the eyes or a general loss in intelligence, and have uncovered the neural mechanisms of object recognition. The results, published by Cell Press in the July 15th issue of the journal Neuron, describe the functional ...

New research reveals soil microbes accelerate global warming

2011-07-14
More carbon dioxide in the atmosphere causes soil to release the potent greenhouse gases methane and nitrous oxide, new research published in this week's edition of Nature reveals. "This feedback to our changing atmosphere means that nature is not as efficient in slowing global warming as we previously thought," said Dr Kees Jan van Groenigen, Research Fellow at the Botany department at the School of Natural Sciences, Trinity College Dublin, and lead author of the study. Van Groenigen, along with colleagues from Northern Arizona University and the University of Florida, ...

1 more way plants help human health

2011-07-14
A tiny plant called Arabidopsis thaliana just helped scientists unearth new clues about the daily cycles of many organisms, including humans. This is the latest in a long line of research, much of it supported by the National Institutes of Health, that uses plants to solve puzzles in human health. While other model organisms may seem to have more in common with us, greens like Arabidopsis provide an important view into genetics, cell division and especially light sensing, which drives 24-hour behavioral cycles called circadian rhythms. Some human cells, including ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

AI analysis of urine can predict flare up of lung disease a week in advance

New DESI results weigh in on gravity

New DESI data shed light on gravity’s pull in the universe

Boosting WA startups: Report calls for investment in talent, diversity and innovation

New AEM study highlights feasibility of cranial accelerometry device for prehospital detection of large-vessel occlusion stroke

High cardiorespiratory fitness linked to lower risk of dementia

Oral microbiome varies with life stress and mental health symptoms in pregnant women

NFL’s Arizona Cardinals provide 12 schools with CPR resources to improve cardiac emergency outcomes

Northerners, Scots and Irish excel at detecting fake accents to guard against outsiders, Cambridge study suggests

Synchronized movement between robots and humans builds trust, study finds

Global experts make sense of the science shaping public policies worldwide in new International Science Council and Frontiers Policy Labs series

The Wistar Institute and Cameroon researchers reveals HIV latency reversing properties in African plant

$4.5 million Dept. of Education grant to expand mental health services through Binghamton University Community Schools

Thermochemical tech shows promising path for building heat

Four Tufts University faculty are named top researchers in the world

Columbia Aging Center epidemiologist co-authors new report from National Academies on using race and ethnicity in biomedical research

Astronomers discover first pairs of white dwarf and main sequence stars in clusters, shining new light on stellar evolution

C-Path’s TRxA announces $1 million award for drug development project in type 1 diabetes

Changing the definition of cerebral palsy

New research could pave way for vaccine against deadly wildlife disease

Listening for early signs of Alzheimer’s disease #ASA187

Research Spotlight: Gastroenterology education improved through inpatient care teaching model

Texas A&M researchers uncover secrets of horse genetics for conservation, breeding

Bioeconomy in Colombia: The race to save Colombia's vital shellfish

NFL’s Colts bring CPR education to flag football to improve cardiac emergency outcomes

Research: Fitness more important than fatness for a lower risk of premature death

Researchers use biophysics to design new vaccines against RSV and related respiratory viruses

New study highlights physician perspectives on emerging anti-amyloid treatments for Alzheimer’s disease in Israel

U of M research finds creativity camp improves adolescent mental health, well-being

How human brain functional networks emerge and develop during the birth transition

[Press-News.org] Taking out a cancer's co-dependency
Novel compound selectively kills cancer cells by blocking their response to oxidative stress