July 10, 2012
05:14 PM Eastern Daylight Time May have significant clinical implications for
all cancers as well as other diseases LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A
previously unreported mechanism for the growth and spread of cancer has been
reported by Muller Fabbri, MD, first author on the paper that recently appeared
in the early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
This mechanism may have implications for all types of cancer as well as other
diseases of the immune system. Although the study is preclinical, it provides a
rationale for the development of new cancer treatments. “This study reveals a
new function of microRNA, which we show binds to a protein receptor” “To design
innovative treatments against diseases like cancer, researchers need to
identify potential vulnerabilities in how the disease develops. Dr Fabbri and
his colleagues have accomplished that goal,” said Brent Polk, MD, director of
The Saban Research Institute of Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. “In this study
we discovered a completely new mechanism used by cancer to develop, grow and
spread,” said Fabbri, a researcher at the Children’s Center for Cancer and
Blood Diseases at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. “But what is even more
exciting is that now we have identified a key mechanism used by cancer cells to
grow and disseminate, and therefore we can develop new drugs that can fight
tumors by entering this newly identified breach in cancer’s fortress. Finally,
we show that this mechanism involves TLR8, a fundamental receptor of the immune
system, suggesting that the implications of this discovery may extend to other
diseases such as autoimmune and inflammatory diseases.” Scientists have shown
that small fragments of RNA, called micro-RNA or miRNA, are present in the
blood of cancer patients at different levels than in healthy patients, and this
has led to the conclusion that miRNAs are excellent biomarkers for the
diagnosis of cancer, since they can differentiate a cancer-bearing from a
healthy patient. Cancer cells release miRNAs both into their surrounding
micro-environment and into the circulation. This is the first report showing
that a previously unknown cross-talk between cancer cells and immune cells,
mediated by cancer cell-released miRNAs, represents a new mechanism for the
growth and spread of cancer cells. “This study reveals a new function of
microRNA, which we show binds to a protein receptor,” said Carlo Croce, MD,
director of Ohio State ’s Human Cancer Genetics program,
where the study was performed. “This tells us that some cancer-released
microRNAs can bind and activate a receptor in a hormone-like fashion, and this
has not been seen before.” Fabbri, Croce and their colleagues demonstrated that
lung cancer cells are able to secrete miRNAs inside of small vesicles, called
exosomes, and the surrounding immune cells, that are normally present in the
tumor, are able to capture and engulf these exosomes and the miRNAs contained
in them. They found that two miRNAs contained in the exosome (called miR-21 and
miR-29a ) are able to bind to a
receptor, called toll-like receptor 8 (TLR8). Once miRNA binds to TLR8 in the immune cells, it activates the
receptor and causes the release of interleukin-6 (IL-6) and tumor necrosis
factor alpha (TNF-a), resulting in proliferation and increased metastatic
potential of the cancer cells. The study also shows that immune cells within a
tumor, may be unable to destroy cancer cells and may actually be necessary for
their growth and dissemination. The clinical implications of this discovery are
significant since identifying a completely new mechanism used by cancer cells
provides a new opportunity for therapeutic intervention. Developing drugs that
interfere with the cancer cell’s ability to release this miRNA-mediated signal
to the surrounding immune cells may effectively interfere with the ability of
cancer to grow and spread. Stuart Siegel, MD, director of the Children’s Center
for Cancer and Blood Diseases commented, “As new technology allows researchers
to "peel the onion" back on how cancer cells actually grow and
spread, discoveries such as the one described by Dr Fabbri and his colleagues
help us put this complex puzzle together, and offer us new paths to launch
attacks on the basic mechanisms that control the deadly behavior of these
cells. We hope to take advantage of these discoveries to develop more effective
treatments for cancer in children and adults." Fabbri performed the
research at Ohio State University
in the lab of Carlo M. Croce, MD. He will be continuing this work at the
Children’s Center for Cancer and Blood Diseases at Children’s Hospital Los
Angeles. He is also an assistant professor of Pediatrics and Molecular Biology
and Immunology at the Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern
California .
About Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Children's Hospital Los Angeles
has been named the best children’s hospital in California and among the top five in the
nation for clinical excellence with its selection to the prestigious US News
& World Report Honor Roll. Children’s Hospital is home to The Saban Research
Institute, one of the largest and most productive pediatric research facilities
in the United States , is one
of America 's premier
teaching hospitals and has been affiliated with the Keck School of Medicine of
the University of
Southern California since
1932.
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