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Drug slows
prostate tumor growth by keeping Vitamin A
active
Newswise — A novel compound that blocks the breakdown of
retinoic acid, derived from vitamin A, is a
surprisingly effective and “promiscuous”
agent in treating animal models of human
prostate cancer, say investigators from the
University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB).
Daily injections of the agent VN/14-1 resulted in up to a 50
percent decrease in tumor volume in mice
implanted with human prostate cancer cells,
reported Aakanksha Khandelwal, Ph.D., today
at the American Association for Cancer
Research Centennial Conference on
Translational Cancer Medicine. No further
tumor growth was seen during the five-week
study, Khandelwal reports.
Importantly, VN/14-1 exerted its effects in multiple ways,
which is the hallmark of a so-called
promiscuous drug, according to the study’s
senior investigator, Vincent C.O. Njar,
Ph.D., associate professor in the Department
of Pharmacology and Experimental
Therapeutics within UMB’s School of
Medicine.
“This potent agent causes cancer cells to differentiate,
forcing them to turn back to a non-cancerous
state − which is what we expected it would
do − but it also stops cancer growth by
arresting the cell cycle and pushes cells to
die by inducing programmed cell death,” Njar
said.
“These functions were unexpected and wonderfully surprising,”
he said. “I am not aware that any other drug
currently used to treat prostate cancer
targets so many pathways.”
Vitamin A, when converted by the body into retinoic acid, is
known to be involved in maintaining the
normal growth of cells, and other research
has shown that prostate cancer cells contain
five to eight times less retinoic acid than
normal prostate cells. Njar’s laboratory
developed a number of compounds, including
VN/14-1, with the aim of inhibiting the
normal breakdown of retinoic acid in cancer
cells.
The agent is similar in function to the well-known acne and
anti-aging therapy, Retin-A, as well as to
the leukemia drug Vesanoid. These products,
known as retinoids, add all-trans retinoic
acid (ATRA) to skin or cancer cells. VN/14-1,
which is a retinoic acid metabolism blocking
agent (RAMBA), works by inhibiting the
breakdown of ATRA, keeping more retinoic
acid available within cancer cells so that
the chemical can redirect these cells back
into their normal growth patterns, which
includes programmed cell death.
“Our idea is that rather than give extra ATRA, we would
prevent ATRA already available within cells
from being broken down,” Njar said. “We now
call VN/14-1 an atypical RAMBA because in
addition to blocking ATRA metabolism, it has
other multiple desirable anti-cancer
effects.”
VN/14-1 works by blocking the CYP26 enzyme that actually
transforms ATRA into inactive compounds, he
says. The researchers have successfully
tested VN/14-1 in breast cancer cells and
have been funded to study the compound in
preclinical studies that can lead to a Phase
I human clinical trial.
In this study, the researchers found in mouse models of human
prostate cancer that a 5 mg/kg (milligram
per kilogram) dose injected daily resulted
in a 33 percent reduction in tumor size; a
dose twice as large reduced tumors by 50
percent.
They also tested a dose of 20 mg/kg through oral and
intravenous administration to study the
concentration of VN/14-1 in the blood over
time in rats. They found that the amount of
VN/14-1 in the blood after oral
administration was exceptionally high
compared to intravenous VN/14-1. This
indicates that VN/14-1 should be tested
orally as this is the preferred route of
drug administration in humans, Njar says.
“Giving an agent orally in small doses is
exactly what you want in an anti-cancer
drug,” he said.
The study was funded by grants from the National Institutes
of Health and National Cancer Institute, the
U.S. Department of Defense, and UMB’s
Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Cancer
Center.
The mission of the American Association for Cancer Research
is to prevent and cure cancer. Founded in
1907, AACR is the world's oldest and largest
professional organization dedicated to
advancing cancer research.
The membership
includes nearly 26,000 basic, translational,
and clinical researchers; health care
professionals; and cancer survivors and
advocates in the United States and more than
70 other countries. AACR marshals the full
spectrum of expertise from the cancer
community to accelerate progress in the
prevention, diagnosis and treatment of
cancer through high-quality scientific and
educational programs.
It funds innovative,
meritorious research grants. The AACR Annual
Meeting attracts more than 17,000
participants who share the latest
discoveries and developments in the field.
Special Conferences throughout the year
present novel data across a wide variety of
topics in cancer research, treatment, and
patient care.
AACR publishes five major
peer-reviewed journals: Cancer Research;
Clinical Cancer Research;
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics;
Molecular Cancer Research; and Cancer
Epidemiology, Biomarkers & Prevention.
Its most recent publication, CR, is a
magazine for cancer survivors, patient
advocates, their families, physicians, and
scientists.
It provides a forum for sharing
essential, evidence-based information and
perspectives on progress in cancer research,
survivorship, and advocacy.
The Agency for Science, Technology and Research, or A*STAR,
is Singapore's lead agency for fostering
world-class scientific research and talent
for a vibrant knowledge-based Singapore.
A*STAR actively nurtures public sector
research and development in Biomedical
Sciences, Physical Sciences and Engineering,
with a particular focus on fields essential
to Singapore's manufacturing industry and
new growth industries.
It oversees 14 research institutes and supports
extramural research with the universities,
hospital research centres and other local
and international partners. At the heart of
this knowledge intensive work is human
capital.
Top local and international scientific talent drive knowledge
creation at A*STAR research institutes. The
Agency also sends scholars for
undergraduate, graduate and post-doctoral
training in the best universities, a
reflection of the high priority A*STAR
places on nurturing the next generation of
scientific talent.
The Genome Institute of Singapore (GIS) is a member of the
Agency for Science, Technology and Research
(A*STAR). It is a national initiative with a
global vision that seeks to use genomic
sciences to improve public health and public
prosperity. Established in 2001 as a centre
for genomic discovery, the GIS will pursue
the integration of technology, genetics and
biology towards the goal of individualized
medicine.
The key research areas at the GIS include Systems Biology,
Stem Cell & Developmental Biology, Cancer
Biology & Pharmacology, Human Genetics,
Infectious Diseases, Genomic Technologies,
and Computational & Mathematical Biology.
The genomics infrastructure at the GIS is
utilized to train new scientific talent, to
function as a bridge for academic and
industrial research, and to explore
scientific questions of high impact.
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