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Chemist Refines Technique to treat Prostate
Cancer with Light
Newswise June 2010 — There’s more than one
way to kill a cancer cell.
Cliff Berkman is working on a better way—one
that specifically targets prostate cancer
cells and causes a type of natural death
that spares surrounding tissues from damage.
In a recent paper in the journal “Cancer
Letters,” he describes a method that
delivers to the cells a chemical that, when
exposed to a certain type of light, prompts
the cells to die and disappear with minimal
side effects.
“Ultimately, what we’re trying to do is cure
cancer with light,” said Berkman, a
Washington State University chemistry
professor.
Berkman and his coauthors are studying
photodynamic therapy, which has grown in
popularity in recent decades after being
used with limited success for more than 100
years. As with radiation and chemotherapy,
photodynamic therapy researchers have
struggled to target tumors without causing
side effects or damage to other parts of the
body.
“Therapy that is not specifically targeted
to cancer cells results in collateral
damage,” said Berkman. In prostate cancer,
that can involve hitting sensitive tissue
nearby, resulting in impotence and
incontinence.
Berkman’s lab set out to specifically target
prostate cancer cells by developing a
chemical that will bind to prostate-specific
membrane antigen, a protein unique to the
cells and referred to as PSMA.
The lab at first called the chemical LW54—LW
for doctoral graduate student and co-author
Lisa Wu, and 54 for the laboratory notebook
page on which she documented the first time
the chemical was made.
The chemical effectively mimics two amino
acids recognized by PSMA and is brought into
the cell. It is in effect a Trojan horse,
carrying a chemical that, when exposed to
the right type of light, releases
destructive free-radical oxygen molecules.
In general, physical and chemical cell
damage often leads to a process in which the
cell’s contents simply get dumped into the
body, creating an inflammatory response that
can cause pain and damage to surrounding
tissue.
But Berkman’s method targets a specific part
of the cell that triggers a programmed cell
death in which the components of a dead cell
are reabsorbed without causing inflammation.
Berkman says the recent research, done in
laboratory cell cultures, serves as a proof
of concept for future work. Moving one step
further in a related study, he has already
seen that the LW54 chemical outfitted with a
radioactive payload can home in on prostate
tumors in mice. The next step is to see how
prostate tumors in mice react when the LW54
chemical carries a photosensitizer.
“After two hours, we’ll shine light on the
tumors and that should cause those cells to
self-destruct and the tumors should be
eradicated,” Berkman said.
“Once we prove that, then we may have an
alternative therapeutic photodrug for the
treatment of prostate cancer.”
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