(Press-News.org) The well-established elevated risk of melanoma among people with red hair and fair skin may be caused by more than just a lack of natural protection against ultraviolet (UV) radiation. In an article receiving Advance Online Publication in Nature, Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Cutaneous Biology Research Center (CBRC)and Cancer Center researchers report finding that the type of skin pigment predominantly found in red-haired, fair-skinned individuals may itself contribute to the development of melanoma.
"We've known for a long time that people with red hair and fair skin have the highest melanoma risk of any skin type. These new findings do not increase that risk but identify a new mechanism to help explain it," says David Fisher, MD, PhD, chief of the MGH Department of Dermatology, director of the CBRC and senior author of the Nature paper. "This may provide an opportunity to develop better sunscreens and other measures that directly address this pigmentation-associated risk while continuing to protect against UV radiation, which remains our first line of defense against melanoma and other skin cancers."
Several types of the pigment melanin are found in the skin: a dark brown or black form called eumelanin, predominant in individuals with dark hair or skin, and a lighter blond-to-red pigment called pheomelanin, the predominant pigment in individuals with red hair, freckles and fair skin. Red/blond melanin is known to be less effective than dark melanin in shielding against UV damage, but there were several hints that the incidence of melanoma in individuals of that skin type may not be fully explained by limited UV protection. While the increased risk of non-melanoma skin cancers is limited to sun-exposed areas, the melanoma risk also applies to areas of skin not exposed to sunlight. In addition, although available sunscreens may do a good job of blocking some forms of UV damage such as sunburns, many studies have suggested that they may not be as effective protecting against melanoma as against other types of skin cancers.
In their search for additional contributors to melanoma development, the MGH team used strains of mice that were nearly identical genetically except for the gene that controls the type of melanin produced. One group of dark-colored mice had the typical variant leading to a predominance of dark melanin. Another group of mice had a "red hair-fair skin" version, the same variant that produces red hair and fair skin in humans. The researchers used a method devised by co-authors at the University of California, San Francisco and Yale University to activate the melanoma-associated form of the BRAF oncogene in patches of the animals' skin pigment cells, with the expectation that an additional environmental stress like UV radiation would be needed to induce melanoma formation. They were surprised to find that within months, half of the red mice had developed melanomas, while only a few dark mice had.
After confirming that there was no unexpected UV radiation in the area where the mice were housed, the investigators wondered whether red pigment itself might be carcinogenic. Since the red hair/fair skin gene controls many cellular activities beyond pigment production, they tested the melanoma risk within a group of red hair/fair skinned mice in which all pigment production had been genetically disabled, a strain called "albino redheads." The researchers observed that complete removal of the red-pigment pathway profoundly protected those mice from melanoma formation, indicating that something about the pigment itself, and not other aspects of being red-haired and fair-skinned, was leading to melanoma.
Suspecting that the red-pigment-associated risk might be chemically related to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) – unstable oxygen-containing molecules that can damage cells – the researchers examined skin from both red and albino redhead mice. They discovered elevated levels of a type of DNA damage typically produced by ROS in skin of red mice but not in albino redheads, supporting oxidative damage as the mechanism behind red-pigment-associated melanoma formation.
While this result suggests antioxidant treatments may be able to reduce this risk, Fisher cautions that further research is needed to identify safe and effective ways to exploit this knowledge. "Antioxidant treatments are not highly predictable in their actions and in some instances have even been seen to increase rather than prevent oxidative damage. Therefore we need to determine how to control this pathway safely and effectively," he says. "There are additional key questions to investigate, such as whether these findings also may pertain to people with, for example, fair skin and dark hair.
"Right now we're excited to have a new clue to help better understand this mystery behind melanoma, which we have always hoped could be a preventable disease," he adds. "The risk for people with this skin type has not changed, but now we know that blocking UV radiation – which continues to be essential – may not be enough. It will be important for these individuals to be aware of changes in their skin and never hesitate to have something checked by a dermatologist, even if they have scrupulously protected themselves from sun exposure, which we continue to encourage. About six out of seven melanomas will be cured if they are found early, so we need to heighten awareness and caution."
Along with Fisher, the Wigglesworth Professor of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School, co-authors of the Nature paper are lead author Devarati Mitra of the MGH Cutaneous Biology Research Center (CBRC); Ann Morgan, Jennifer Lo, Kathleen Robinson and Suprabha Devi, MGH CBRC; Xi Luo, Kevin Haigis and Daniel Haber, MGH Cancer Center; Mai Hoang and Martin Mihm, MGH Pathology; Jennifer Wargo, MGH Surgery; Jin Wang, Candace Guerrero and Yinsheng Wang, University of California, Riverside; Jochen Lennerz, University of Ulm, Germany; Jillian Vanover and John D'Orazio, University of Kentucky School of Medicine; Martin McMahon, University of California, San Francisco; and Marcus Bosenberg, Yale University School of Medicine.
The study was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Dr. Miriam and Sheldon Adelson Medical Research Foundation, the US-Israel Binational Science Foundation and the Melanoma Research Alliance.
###
Massachusetts General Hospital (www.massgeneral.org), founded in 1811, 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 more than $750 million and major research centers in AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer, computational and integrative biology, cutaneous biology, human genetics, medical imaging, neurodegenerative disorders, regenerative medicine, reproductive biology, systems biology, transplantation biology and photomedicine. In July 2012, MGH moved into the number one spot on the 2012-13 U.S. News & World Report list of "America's Best Hospitals."
Unexpected factor contributes to melanoma risk in red-haired, fair-skinned individuals
Red/blond pigment may actively participate in melanoma formation, identifying possible new prevention strategy
2012-11-01
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Pond skating insects reveal water-walking secrets
2012-11-01
This month's special issue of Physics World is devoted to animal physics, and includes science writer Stephen Ornes explanation of how pond skaters effortlessly skip across water leaving nothing but a small ripple in their wake.
As Ornes writes, our current understanding of the mechanisms adopted by the pond skater is down to the efforts of David Hu, who as a mathematics graduate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology spent four years studying their behaviour.
Hu, along with his PhD supervisor John Bush, found that pond skaters use the middle of their three ...
Sleep duration affects hunger differently in men and women
2012-11-01
A new study suggests that increasing the amount of sleep that adults get could lead to reduced food intake, but the hormonal process differs between men and women.
"Restricting sleep in healthy, normal weight participants has limited effects on metabolic risk factors and may affect food intake regulating hormones differently in men and women," said Marie-Pierre St-Onge, PhD, FAHA, the study's principal investigator. "We were surprised by the lack of a significant effect of sleep on glucose and insulin, leptin, and sex differences in the hunger-stimulating hormone ghrelin ...
Scientific team sequences 1,092 human genomes to determine standard range of human genetic variation
2012-11-01
Completing the second phase of the 1000 Genomes Project, a multinational team of scientists reports that they have sampled a total of 1092 individuals from 14 different populations and sequenced their full genomes. The researchers described the feat as a collegial effort to equip biologists and physicians with information that can be used to understand the normal range of human genetic variants so that a patient's disease genome can be interpreted in a broader context.
A report on the research, published online in Nature on Nov. 1 represents the culmination of five years ...
1,000 Genomes Project paints detailed picture of human variation
2012-11-01
HOUSTON -- (Nov. 1, 2012) – First, there was the single human reference genome completed in 2003. Then there was the HapMap project to identify the common genetic variants occurring in human beings with the first map published in 2005. Now an international consortium has released the first phase of the 1,000 Genomes Project that profiles the rare and common genetic variations in 1,092 people drawn from 14 human populations from Europe, Africa, East Asia and the Americas.
The next phase of the project will include as many as 3,000 individuals, said Dr. Fuli Yu (www.bcm.edu/genetics/index.cfm?pmid=23673
), ...
New genetic links for inflammatory bowel disease uncovered
2012-11-01
Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) – inflammatory diseases of the gastrointestinal tract – have puzzled the scientific community for decades. Ten years ago, researchers recognized that both genes and the environment contributed to these diseases but knew little about precisely how and why illness occurred. To begin to narrow in on the key pathways involved, they would need thousands of patients' samples, millions of data points, and the commitment of physicians and scientists at dozens of institutions.
Today, researchers from across the CD and UC communities ...
Fear of math can hurt
2012-11-01
Fear of math can activate regions of the brain linked with the experience of physical pain and visceral threat detection, according to research published Oct 31 by Ian Lyons and colleagues at the University of Chicago in the open access journal PLOS ONE.
The researchers found that in individuals who experience high levels of anxiety when facing math tasks, the anticipation of math increases activity in regions of the brain associated with the physical sensation of pain. The higher an individual's math anxiety, the more such neural activity was increased.
According ...
5 year olds are generous only when they're watched
2012-11-01
Children as young as five are generous when others are aware of their actions, but antisocial when sharing with a recipient who can't see them, according to research published Oct. 31 in the open access journal PLOS ONE by Kristin Lyn Leimgruber and colleagues from Yale University.
Adults are more likely to behave in ways that enhance their reputation when they are being watched or their actions are likely to be made public than when they are anonymous, but this study examines the origins of such behavior in young children for the first time. For their study, the researchers ...
Desert farming forms bacterial communities that promote drought resistance
2012-11-01
When there is little water available for plants to grow, their roots form alliances with soil microbes that can promote plant growth even under water-limiting conditions, according to research published Oct. 31 by Daniele Daffonchio and colleagues from the University of Milan, Italy in the open access journal PLOS ONE.
Symbiotic relationships between plants and soil microbial communities are critical to the health of plants. Though the effects of drought on plants are well-known, little is known about how lack of water affects the bacteria around plant roots.
In this ...
Western aspen trees commonly carry extra set of chromosomes
2012-11-01
A large proportion of aspen in the western U.S. sport an extra set of chromosomes in their cells, a phenomenon termed triploidy, according to new research published Oct. 31 in the open access journal PLoS ONE by Karen Mock from Utah State University and colleagues at several other institutions. In some areas of southern Utah and Colorado, over 60% of aspen trees are triploid.
Though triploid trees are not uncommon, this genetic anomaly can cause altered physical traits including sterility or reduced fertility. Although a triploid aspen clone may reproduce with root ...
Gut reaction: The evolution of IBD
2012-11-01
In one of the largest studies of its kind, researchers have identified 71 genetic regions newly associated with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), increasing the total number discovered to date to 163. This new information reveals that there is a vast amount of genetic overlap between Crohn's disease and Ulcerative colitis (the two most common subtypes of IBD), suggesting that they share common biological pathways. In addition, analyzing these regions reveals that IBD may result from the body's immune response over-reacting, the result of a long-term evolutionary balancing ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
A gender gap in using AI for research
Human-caused fires growing faster than lightning fires in the Western US
Barbeque and grandma’s cookies: New study looks at nostalgia, comfort in food preparation for older adults
The political consequences of undocumented residents in the census
Purity and environmental concern
Branch patterns in trees and art
Researcher develops method to measure blood-brain barrier permeability accurately
SynGAP Research Fund dba cure SYNGAP1 (SRF) announces the release of their SYNGAP1 impact report for 2024
Breakthrough in click chemistry: innovative method revolutionizes drug development
Digital Science announces Catalyst Grant winners, rewarding innovations to safeguard research integrity
How cancer cells trick the immune system by altering mitochondria
Poll: Most U.S. workers with chronic conditions manage them at work, haven’t told employer
Disruption of a single amino acid in a cellular protein makes breast cancer cells behave like stem cells
As more Americans work later in life, poll shows positive health impacts, especially for those over 65
Is the Metaverse a new frontier for human-centric manufacturing?
When qubits learn the language of fiberoptics
The prevalence of older Americans without disabilities increases substantially between 2008 and 2017
New study reveals hidden manic symptoms in one-fourth of schizophrenia patients
Does the universe behave the same way everywhere? Gravitational lenses could help us find out
Majority support moderation on social media platforms
Majority support moderation on social media platforms, global survey shows
Born too late? Climate change may be delaying births
Truly autonomous AI is on the horizon
California’s marine protected areas boost fish populations across the state
Poachers’ social media posts reveal alarming extent of illegal wildlife hunting in Lebanon
Examining the potential environmental effects of mining the world’s largest lithium deposit
Chicken ‘woody breast’ detection improved with advanced machine learning model
Around 1 in 5 UK medical students considers dropping out, study suggests
Poor childhood social and cognitive skills combo linked to teens’ poor exam results
Position menstrual cups carefully to avoid possible kidney problems, doctors urge
[Press-News.org] Unexpected factor contributes to melanoma risk in red-haired, fair-skinned individualsRed/blond pigment may actively participate in melanoma formation, identifying possible new prevention strategy