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Discovery could bring new Metastatic Cancer
treatments
Newswise — Virginia
Commonwealth University and VCU Massey
Cancer Center researchers have uncovered how
a gene, melanoma differentiation associated
gene-7/interleukin-24 (mda-7/IL-24), induces
a bystander effect that kills cancer cells
not directly receiving mda-7/IL-24 without
harming healthy ones, a discovery that could
lead to new therapeutic strategies to fight
metastatic disease.
The findings may provide a
method to target metastatic disease – which
is one of the primary challenges in cancer
therapy. When cancer cells are localized in
the body, specialists may be able to
surgically remove the diseased area.
However, when cancer
metastasizes or spreads to sites remote from
the primary tumor through the lymph system
and blood vessels to new target sites,
treatment becomes more difficult and in many
instances ineffective.
In the study, published
online in the June 30 issue of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, researchers report on the
molecular and biochemical mechanisms by
which the gene, mda-7/IL-24, is able to
selectively kill cancer cells through
apoptosis, or programmed cell death.
The gene induces a potent
bystander effect, meaning that it not only
kills the original tumor, but distant ones
as well, which has been observed but
previously not mechanistically defined in
animal models containing human cancers and
in a Phase I Clinical Trial involving direct
injection of an adenovirus expressing
mda-7/IL-24 into advanced carcinomas and
melanomas.
Further, the team determined
that mda-7/IL-24 induces tumor-specific
killing through a process known as
endoplasmic reticulum stress.
The endoplasmic reticulum, or
ER, is a subcellular structure that plays a
key role in cellular protein disposition. ER
stress results from accumulation of extra
proteins in the ER of a cancer cell and can
activate pro-survival or pro-cell suicide
pathways.
“Cancer cells cannot
accommodate or recover from stress the way
normal, healthy cells can. When the ER is
stressed in this way, the result is an
unfolded protein response which overloads
the system and shorts out the cancer cell.
This prevents tumor development, growth and
invasion – and ultimately the cancer cell
dies,” said Paul B. Fisher, Ph.D., professor
and interim chair of the Department of Human
and Molecular Genetics, and director of the
VCU Institute of Molecular Medicine, in the
VCU School of Medicine.
This work was supported by
grants from the National Institutes of
Health and the Samuel Waxman Cancer Research
Foundation.
In related work, Fisher, who
is the first incumbent of the Thelma
Newmeyer Corman Endowed Chair in Cancer
Research and researcher with the VCU Massey
Cancer Center, has been invited by the NIH’s
National Cancer Institute to present his
team’s translational research on mda-7/IL-24
at the National Cancer Institute’s (NCI)
Translational Science Meeting.
The research focuses on using
mda-7/IL-24 in the development of therapies
for prostate cancer, malignant glioma and
ovarian cancer. The meeting is scheduled for
November 2008 in Washington, D.C.
Fisher worked with a team
that included VCU School of Medicine
researchers Paul Dent, Ph.D., professor in
the VCU Department of Biochemistry and
Molecular Biology; Zaozhong Su, Ph.D.,
associate professor in the VCU Department of
Human and Molecular Genetics; Devanand
Sarkar, Ph.D., assistant professor at the
VCU Massey Cancer Center and Department of
Human and Molecular Genetics; and Moira
Sauane, Ph.D.; Pankaj Gupta, Ph.D.; and
Irina V. Lebedeva, Ph.D., with the Columbia
University College of Physicians and
Surgeons in New York
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