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

Melanoma - The wolf in sheep's clothing

Researchers from the University of Bonn discover how melanoma cells circumvent the immune system

2012-10-11
(Press-News.org) Melanoma is so dangerous because it tends to metastasize early on. New treatment approaches utilize, among other things, the ability of the immune defense to search out and destroy malignant cells. Yet this strategy is often only temporarily effective. A research team under the direction of Bonn University has discovered why this is the case: In the inflammatory reaction caused by the treatment, the tumor cells temporarily alter their external characteristics and thus become invisible to defense cells. This knowledge forms an important foundation for the improvement of combination therapies. The results have been published online in the renowned journal "Nature."

In Germany, approximately 15,000 people develop melanoma annually and approximately 2,000 people die from it every year. Malignant melanoma is the most frequently fatal skin diseases. The particular malignancy is based on the fact that small tumors can spread via the lymphatic vessels and the bloodstream. For many years, the working group under Prof. Dr. Thomas Tüting, Director of the Laboratory for Experimental Dermatology at the Bonn University Hospital, has investigated the effect of a targeted immune therapy with tumor-specific defense cells.

Tumor cells behave like a wolf in sheep's clothing

In trials on mice who congenitally develop melanoma, the researchers were able to destroy advanced tumors using so-called cytotoxic T-cells. "But they recover after some time - just as they do in patients in the hospital," explain Dr. Jennifer Landsberg and Dr. Judith Kohlmeyer, lead authors of the study. This form of therapy triggers inflammation. Now the researchers have discovered that the melanoma cells change their external characteristics precisely via this accompanying inflammatory reaction. "They behave like wolves in sheep's clothing and thus evade detection and destruction by defense cells," says Marcel Renn, also a lead author of the study.

The immune system can fight tumors – but it can also protect them

On the search for the underlying mechanisms, the researchers pointed histological investigations of tumors in the right direction: Therapy-resistant melanomas demonstrated a significantly stronger inflammatory reaction with many scavenger cells of the immune system, the so-called macrophages. A messenger primarily released from these immune cells - the tumor necrosis factor-alpha - was able to bring about the change in character of the melanoma cells directly in the Petri dish in the laboratory. Cells treated in this way were subsequently hardly detected by the defense cells. "The immune system is like a double-edged sword," explains Prof. Tüting. "It can fight the tumor – but it can also protect it." Such changes in the tumor tissue are probably of great importance for the formation of resistance to therapy. "According to more recent discoveries, treatment with inhibitors which prevent signal transmission in tumor cells is also affected by this," remarks Prof. Tüting.

Melanoma cells lose their typical characteristics

Molecular genetic investigations revealed that melanoma cells from therapy-resistant tumors had lost the characteristics typical for pigment cells. Instead, they demonstrated traits of connective tissue cells. "It is possible that melanoma cells undergo this change in character so easily because they originate from the embryonic development of cells in the neural crest which can also form connective tissue and nerve cells," says Prof. Dr. Michael Hölzel, co-author from the Institute for Clinical Pharmacology and Clinical Chemistry at the Bonn University Hospital.

Results can also be transferred to humans

Findings initially gained from laboratory mice were also able to be reproduced by the team of researchers with human melanoma cells and various associated defense cells in the Petri dish. The melanoma cells likewise reacted to the messenger tumor necrosis factor-alpha with a loss of pigment cell characteristics and could then no longer be detected by pigment-cell-specific defense cells. "Detection by other defense cells which can search out specific genetic changes in the melanoma cells was not affected by this, however," stresses Prof. Dr. Thomas Wölfel, director of a working group involved in the study at the Medical Clinic III of the Mainz University Hospital.

Important findings for new treatment strategies

As soon as the tumor necrosis factor alpha no longer had an effect on the human and mouse melanoma cells, however, the cells regained their pigment-cell characteristics. Then they were also able to be detected and fought against by all immune defense cells once more. All of these findings yield important information for new treatment strategies. Thus in the future, defense cells against antigens of various categories and specificity should be used and at the same time, the inflammation utilized by the tumor cells should be therapeutically inhibited. "Our experimental model system will help us to develop optimally effective combination therapies as rapidly as possible," says Prof. Tüting. "However, it will still take several years until the clinical application of strategies of this type."

###Publication: Melanomas resist T-cell therapy through inflammation-induced reversible dedifferentiation, Nature, DOI: 10.1038/nature11538

Contact Information:

Prof. Dr. Thomas Tüting
Assistant Medical Director at the Clinic and Polyclinic for
Dermatology and Allergology
Director of the Laboratory for Experimental Dermatology
Bonn University Hospital
Tel. +49 (0) 228/287-16231
E-Mail: Thomas.Tueting@ukb.uni-bonn.de


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

High levels of blood-based protein specific to mesothelioma

2012-10-11
NEW YORK, October 11, 2012 – Researchers at NYU School of Medicine have discovered the protein product of a little-known gene may one day prove useful in identifying and monitoring the development of mesothelioma in early stages, when aggressive treatment can have an impact on the progression of disease and patient prognosis. "This gene produces a protein, fibulin-3, that is present in levels four to five times higher in the plasma of patients with mesothelioma compared to levels in asbestos-exposed patients or patients with several other conditions that cause tumors ...

The best of both catalytic worlds

The best of both catalytic worlds
2012-10-11
Catalysts are substances that speed up the rates of chemical reactions without themselves being chemically changed. Industrial catalysts come in two main types - heterogeneous, in which the catalyst is in a different phase from the reactants; and homogeneous, in which catalyst and the reactants are in the same phase. Heterogeneous catalysts are valued for their sustainability because they can be recycled. Homogeneous catalysts are valued for their product selectivity as their properties can be easily tuned through relatively simple chemistry. Researchers with the U.S. ...

Mine your business: Text mining insights from social media

2012-10-11
NEW YORK - October 10, 2012 - Thanks to blogs, online forums, and product review sites, companies and marketers now have access to a seemingly endless array of data on consumers' opinions and experiences. In principle, businesses should be able to use this information to gain a better understanding of the general market and of their own and their competitors' customers. Yet this wealth of consumer-generated content can be both a blessing and a curse. A new approach, described in a study by Oded Netzer, the Philip H. Geier Jr. Associate Professor at Columbia Business School, ...

Light might prompt graphene devices on demand

Light might prompt graphene devices on demand
2012-10-11
HOUSTON – (Oct. 10, 2012) – Rice University researchers are doping graphene with light in a way that could lead to the more efficient design and manufacture of electronics, as well as novel security and cryptography devices. Manufacturers chemically dope silicon to adjust its semiconducting properties. But the breakthrough reported in the American Chemical Society journal ACS Nano details a novel concept: plasmon-induced doping of graphene, the ultrastrong, highly conductive, single-atom-thick form of carbon. That could facilitate the instant creation of circuitry – ...

Fly like an eagle: New launch and recovery system takes UAV into the future

2012-10-11
A shipboard-capable system designed to support both the launch and recovery of the Scan Eagle unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) successfully completed final demonstration flight testing Sept. 27 at a testing range in eastern Oregon. Sponsored by the Office of Naval Research (ONR), the Compact Launch and Recovery System (CLRE) will provide a small-scale solution for the unmanned surveillance craft's operations. "This system's shipboard capability is unique," said John Kinzer, who manages ONR's Air Vehicle Technology Program. "It's more compact than other systems, so you ...

Improving nanometer-scale manufacturing with infrared spectroscopy

Improving nanometer-scale manufacturing with infrared spectroscopy
2012-10-11
One of the key achievements of the nanotechnology era is the development of manufacturing technologies that can fabricate nanostructures formed from multiple materials. Such nanometer-scale integration of composite materials has enabled innovations in electronic devices, solar cells, and medical diagnostics. While there have been significant breakthroughs in nano-manufacturing, there has been much less progress on measurement technologies that can provide information about nanostructures made from multiple integrated materials. Researchers at the University of Illinois ...

The good, the bad, and the guilty: Anticipating feelings of guilt predicts ethical behavior

2012-10-11
From politics to finance, government to education, ethics-related scandals seem to crop up with considerable regularity. As whistleblowers and investigative journalists bring these scandals to light, one can't help but wonder: Are there specific character traits that predispose people to unethical behavior? Converging evidence suggests that the answer could be guilt proneness. In a new article in Current Directions in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, researchers Taya Cohen and Nazli Turan of Carnegie Mellon University and ...

A planetary nebula gallery

A planetary nebula gallery
2012-10-11
This gallery shows four planetary nebulas from the first systematic survey of such objects in the solar neighborhood made with NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory. The planetary nebulas shown here are NGC 6543, also known as the Cat's Eye, NGC 7662, NGC 7009 and NGC 6826. In each case, X-ray emission from Chandra is colored purple and optical emission from the Hubble Space Telescope is colored red, green and blue. In the first part of this survey, published in a new paper, twenty one planetary nebulas within about 5000 light years of the Earth have been observed. The paper ...

Grape consumption associated with healthier dietary patterns

2012-10-11
Sacramento, CA (October 9, 2012) – In a new observational study presented today at the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Food and Nutrition Conference and Exposition (FNCE) in Philadelphia, PA, researchers looked at the association of grape consumption, in the non-alcoholic forms most commonly consumed – fresh grapes, raisins and 100% grape juice – with the diet quality of a recent, nationally representative sample of U.S. children and adults. Their findings suggest that, among adults and children, consumption of grapes and grape products is associated with healthier dietary ...

Analysis finds likely voters rank health care second most important issue in presidential choice

2012-10-11
Boston, MA – A new analysis of 37 national opinion polls conducted by 17 survey organizations finds that health care is the second most important issue for likely voters in deciding their 2012 presidential vote. This is the highest that health care has been ranked as a presidential election issue since 1992. When likely voters were asked to choose from a list of issues, similar to the approach used in election-day exit polls, one in five (20%) named "health care and Medicare" as the most important issue in their 2012 voting choice, far behind "the economy and jobs" (cited ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Research Article | Evaluation of ten satellite-based and reanalysis precipitation datasets on a daily basis for Czechia (2001–2021)

Nano-immunotherapy synergizing ferroptosis and STING activation in metastatic bladder cancer

Insilico Medicine receives IND approval from FDA for ISM8969, an AI-empowered potential best-in-class NLRP3 inhibitor

Combined aerobic-resistance exercise: Dual efficacy and efficiency for hepatic steatosis

Expert consensus outlines a standardized framework to evaluate clinical large language models

Bioengineered tissue as a revolutionary treatment for secondary lymphedema

Forty years of tracking trees reveals how global change is impacting Amazon and Andean Forest diversity

Breathing disruptions during sleep widespread in newborns with severe spina bifida

Whales may divide resources to co-exist under pressures from climate change

Why wetland restoration needs citizens on the ground

Sharktober: Study links October shark bite spike to tiger shark reproduction

PPPL launches STELLAR-AI platform to accelerate fusion energy research

Breakthrough in development of reliable satellite-based positioning for dense urban areas

DNA-templated method opens new frontiers in synthesizing amorphous silver nanostructures

Stress-testing AI vision systems: Rethinking how adversarial images are generated

Why a crowded office can be the loneliest place on earth

Choosing the right biochar can lock toxic cadmium in soil, study finds

Desperate race to resurrect newly-named zombie tree

New study links combination of hormone therapy and tirzepatide to greater weight loss after menopause

How molecules move in extreme water environments depends on their shape

Early-life exposure to a common pollutant harms fish development across generations

How is your corn growing? Aerial surveillance provides answers

Center for BrainHealth launches Fourth Annual BrainHealth Week in 2026

Why some messages are more convincing than others

National Foundation for Cancer Research CEO Sujuan Ba Named One of OncoDaily’s 100 Most Influential Oncology CEOs of 2025

New analysis disputes historic earthquake, tsunami and death toll on Greek island

Drexel study finds early intervention helps most autistic children acquire spoken language

Study finds Alzheimer's disease can be evaluated with brain stimulation

Cells that are not our own may unlock secrets about our health

Caring Cross and Boston Children’s Hospital collaborate to expand access to gene therapy for sickle cell disease and beta thalassemia

[Press-News.org] Melanoma - The wolf in sheep's clothing
Researchers from the University of Bonn discover how melanoma cells circumvent the immune system