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

LIFR protein suppresses breast cancer metastasis

MD Anderson-led team's preclinical study identifies new prognostic marker for survival

LIFR protein suppresses breast cancer metastasis
2012-09-25
(Press-News.org) HOUSTON - A receptor protein suppresses local invasion and metastasis of breast cancer cells, the most lethal aspect of the disease, according to a research team headed by scientists from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

Reporting in Nature Medicine, the team described using high-throughput RNA sequencing to identify the leukemia inhibitory factor receptor (LIFR) as a novel suppressor of breast cancer metastasis, the spread of the disease to other organs.

"Based on our findings, we propose that restoring the expression or the function of key metastasis suppressors like LIFR could be used to block breast cancer metastasis," said lead investigator Li Ma, Ph.D., assistant professor in MD Anderson's Department of Experimental Radiation Oncology.

"Lack of clinically proven prognostic markers and therapeutic agents for metastasis are major barriers for eradicating breast cancer deaths," Ma said. "Although many metastasis-promoting genes have been identified, they have not been translated into clinical practice. The exceptions are the HER2- and VEGF-targeting agents, which have shown measurable but moderate benefit in the clinic."

Only a few genes have been established as metastasis suppressors, Ma said, and many researchers believe that such genes play only a minor role in metastasis.

The investigators in this study, however, found that LIFR is "highly relevant in human tumors." While 94 percent of normal human breast tissues show high LIFR expression, LIFR is downregulated or lost in a significant fraction of patients with ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) or invasive breast cancer, and loss of LIFR closely correlates with poor clinical outcomes.

Protein works by activating Hippo cascade to throttle YAP

Ma said one of the major findings of the study is that LIFR suppresses both the invasion and colonization steps of metastasis by activating the Hippo kinase cascade that leads to functional inactivation of the transcriptional co-activator YAP.

"The LIFR protein is highly relevant in human cancer because it is down-regulated in about 40 percent of human breast cancers and completely lost in nearly 10 percent," Ma said. "Remarkably, in our study of approximately 1,000 patients, we found that loss of the LIFR protein in non-metastatic stages I to III breast tumors is highly associated with poor metastasis-free, recurrence-free and overall survival outcomes."

Ma noted that this work was regarded by peer reviewers as "a ground-breaking contribution" because it: Challenges the dogma that metastasis-suppressor genes are only a small component of metastasis compared with metastasis-promoting genes; Is the first report of a cell membrane receptor that activates Hippo signaling and has a critical function in cancer; and Might have a significant impact on clinical practice.

Ma said information about LIFR in cancer in the literature is very scarce. But some small studies have reported that LIFR is also lost in colon cancer and liver cancer through a gene-silencing mechanism called hypermethylation.

"There are many directions of research that should be pursued," Ma said. "For example, in order to develop LIFR-based methods of treatment, we must further understand the mechanism of its function and regulation of its expression."

Ma added that her group is generating LIFR conditional knockout mice to determine whether genetic deletion of LIFR in the breast will lead to tumorigenesis and metastasis.

INFORMATION:

Co-authors with Ma are Dahu Chen and Peijing Zhang, P h.D., of MD Anderson's Department of Experimental Radiation Oncology; Yutong Sun, Ph.D., Yongkun Wei, Ph.D., Abdol Hossein Rezaeian, Hui-Kuan Lin, Ph.D., and Mien-Chie Hung, Ph.D., all of MD Anderson's Department of Molecular and Cellular Oncology; Julie Teruya-Feldstein, M.D., of Memorial Sloan-Kettering's Department of Pathology; Sumeet Gupta of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research; and Han Liang, Ph.D., of MD Anderson's Department of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology.

Lin, Hung and Ma are also affiliated with the Cancer Biology Program, Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. Mien-Chie Hung is additionally affiliated with the Center for Molecular Medicine and the Graduate Institute of Cancer Biology at China Medical University.

This research was supported by the U.S. National Institutes of Health National Cancer Institute grants R00CA138572, R01CA166051, and P01CA099031; a Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas Scholar Award and a University of Texas STARS Award to Ma; a Faculty Development Award from the MD Anderson Cancer Center Support Grant CA016672 from the U.S. National Institutes of Health; Center for Biological Pathways; a Susan G. Komen for the Cure grant; and the National Breast Cancer Foundation, Inc.

About MD Anderson

The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston ranks as one of the world's most respected centers focused on cancer patient care, research, education and prevention. MD Anderson is one of only 41 comprehensive cancer centers designated by the National Cancer Institute. For nine of the past 11 years, including 2012, MD Anderson has ranked No. 1 in cancer care in the "Best Hospitals" survey published annually in U.S. News & World Report.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
LIFR protein suppresses breast cancer metastasis

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Cutting through the genomic thicket in search of disease variants

Cutting through the genomic thicket in search of disease variants
2012-09-25
In the early stages of that vast undertaking known as the Human Genome Project, enthusiasm ran high. The enterprise would be costly and laborious but the clinical rewards, unprecedented. Once the complete blueprint of life was unlocked, the genetic underpinnings for a broad range of human maladies would be laid bare, allowing custom-tailored diagnosis and treatment and revolutionizing the field of medicine. Or so it was thought. Instead, "scientists were confronted with thousands of mutations in the collection of proteins in personal genomes, with no ready guide about ...

UCLA scientists fine-tune probe for early Alzheimer's detection

2012-09-25
BACKGROUND In the Alzheimer's brain, hard plaques accumulate between the nerve cells while twisted fibers grow inside the nerve cells. The plaques arise from protein fragments called beta amlyoid, and the fibers form from a protein called tau. Doctors rely on brain scans to detect amyloid and tau and provide early intervention and treatment to potentially slow or reverse disease progression. FINDINGS How the imaging agents work that scan the Alzheimer's brain is unknown. A new UCLA study reveals the physical mechanisms that allow chemical agents to bind to and ...

Hundreds of biochemical analyses on a single chip

2012-09-25
This press release is available in French.Inside our cells, molecules are constantly binding and separating from one another. It's this game of constant flux that drives gene expression asides essentially every other biological process. Understanding the specific details of how these interactions take place is thus crucial to our overall understanding of the fundamental mechanisms of living organisms. There are millions of possible combinations of molecules, however; determining all of them would be a Herculean task. Various tools have been developed to measure the degree ...

Boosting natural marijuana-like brain chemicals treats fragile X syndrome symptoms

2012-09-25
Irvine, Calif. — American and European scientists have found that increasing natural marijuana-like chemicals in the brain can help correct behavioral issues related to fragile X syndrome, the most common known genetic cause of autism. The work indicates potential treatments for anxiety and cognitive defects in people with this condition. Results appear online in Nature Communications. Daniele Piomelli of UC Irvine and Olivier Manzoni of INSERM, the French national research agency, led the study, which identified compounds that inhibit enzymes blocking endocannabinoid ...

Making it easier to make stem cells

Making it easier to make stem cells
2012-09-25
LA JOLLA, Calif., September 25, 2012 – The process researchers use to generate induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs)—a special type of stem cell that can be made in the lab from any type of adult cell—is time consuming and inefficient. To speed things up, researchers at Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute (Sanford-Burnham) turned to kinase inhibitors. These chemical compounds block the activity of kinases, enzymes responsible for many aspects of cellular communication, survival, and growth. As they outline in a paper published September 25 in Nature Communications, ...

Impaired protein degradation causes muscle diseases

2012-09-25
When the "fire brigade" arrives too late Impaired protein degradation causes muscle diseases RUB researchers and international colleagues report in Brain New insights into certain muscle diseases, the filaminopathies, are reported by an international research team led by Dr. Rudolf Andre Kley of the RUB's University Hospital Bergmannsheil in the journal Brain. The scientists from the Neuromuscular Centre Ruhrgebiet (headed by Prof. Matthias Vorgerd) at the Neurological University Clinic (Director: Prof. Martin Tegenthoff) cooperated with colleagues from eleven institutes ...

Palliative care experts call for better home care

2012-09-25
Improved home care resources for people with conditions such as dementia, who would prefer to die at home, are key to providing better end of life care and reducing the strain of the UK's ageing population on the NHS, according to researchers at King's College London. A new study, carried out by researchers from the Cicely Saunders Institute at King's and funded by the National Institute for Health Research Health Services &Delivery Research (NIHR HS&DR) Programme, found that 42 per cent of patients with advanced non-malignant conditions reported a preference for home ...

Dr. Yutaka Niihara: Novel therapy helps ease pain and suffering for sickle cell patients

2012-09-25
LOS ANGELES (Sept. 25, 2012) – Chronic, debilitating pain and potential organ failure are what approximately 100,000 sickle cell patients in the United States live with each day. Yutaka Niihara, M.D., M.P.H. - lead investigator at The Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center (LA BioMed) and co-founder of Emmaus Medical, Inc., an LA BioMed spin-off company - is developing a low-cost, noninvasive treatment that helps provide relief for patients suffering from the debilitating effects of sickle cell disease. Dr. Niihara and his team of investigators ...

Researchers develop new technique for IDing proteins secreted by cells

2012-09-25
Researchers from North Carolina State University have developed a new technique to identify the proteins secreted by a cell. The new approach should help researchers collect precise data on cell biology, which is critical in fields ranging from zoology to cancer research. The work is important because cells communicate by secreting proteins. Some of the proteins act on the cell itself, telling it to grow or multiply, for example. But the proteins can also interact with other cells, influencing them to perform any biological function. Traditionally, scientists who wanted ...

Oscillating microscopic beads could be key to biolab on a chip

2012-09-25
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- If you throw a ball underwater, you'll find that the smaller it is, the faster it moves: A larger cross-section greatly increases the water's resistance. Now, a team of MIT researchers has figured out a way to use this basic principle, on a microscopic scale, to carry out biomedical tests that could eventually lead to fast, compact and versatile medical-testing devices. The results, based on work by graduate student Elizabeth Rapoport and assistant professor Geoffrey Beach, of MIT's Department of Materials Science and Engineering (DMSE), are described ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Intensive therapy approaches benefit infants and toddlers with cerebral palsy

National Poll: 1 in 3 parents fear their teen or young adult could cause a crash

New study maps cellular mechanisms driving fibrosis in Crohn's Disease

Novel cancer drug delivery system improves Paclitaxel absorption

New deep learning framework solves the cold-start problem

Extending monitoring period for severe pregnancy complications shows more than 40% of cases previously missed

Maternal race and immigration linked to obstetric trauma: higher risk among Asian mothers and Black immigrant/refugee mothers

Consistency over perfection, new resistance-training guidelines say

Timely scan could save lives of A&E patients with blood in urine

Prostate cancer screening as good as breast cancer screening, say researchers

AI expert and industry leading toxicologist Thomas Hartung hails launch of agentic AI platform a “transformative moment” in chemical safety science

The RESIL-Card tool launches across Europe to strengthen cardiovascular care preparedness against crises

Tools to glimpse how “helicity” impacts matter and light

Smartphone app can help men last longer in bed

Longest recorded journey of a juvenile fisher to find new forest home

Indiana signs landmark education law to advance data science in schools

A new RNA therapy could help the heart repair itself

The dehumanization effect: New PSU research examines how abusive supervision impacts employee agency and burnout

New gel-based system allows bacteria to act as bioelectrical sensors

The power of photonics

From pioneer to leader: Alex Zhavoronkov chairs precision aging discussion and presents Luminary Award to OpenAI president at PMWC 2026

Bursting cancer-seeking microbubbles to deliver deadly drugs

In a South Carolina swamp, researchers uncover secrets of firefly synchrony

American Meteorological Society and partners issue statement on public availability of scientific evidence on climate change

How far will seniors go for a doctor visit? Often much farther than expected

Selfish sperm hijack genetic gatekeeper to kill healthy rivals

Excessive smartphone use associated with symptoms of eating disorder and body dissatisfaction in young people

‘Just-shoring’ puts justice at the center of critical minerals policy

A new method produces CAR-T cells to keep fighting disease longer

Scientists confirm existence of molecule long believed to occur in oxidation

[Press-News.org] LIFR protein suppresses breast cancer metastasis
MD Anderson-led team's preclinical study identifies new prognostic marker for survival