Researchers
identify mechanism used by therapeutically active antitumor cytokine
gene able to induce potent bystander antitumor effect in cancer cellsResearch Highlights:
- Molecular
and biochemical mechanism of action of unique cytokine gene found to
induce potent bystander antitumor effects in animal models and in Phase
I clinical trials identified
- The findings may lead researchers to develop potential novel enhanced therapies to treat various forms of cancer
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.
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