| Reactivated
Gene Shrinks Tumors
"If we can
find drugs that restore p53 function in human tumors in which this pathway
is blocked, they may be effective cancer treatments," said David Kirsch
of MIT's Center for Cancer Research and Harvard Medical School, one of
the lead co-authors of the paper.
The study will
be published in the Jan. 24 online edition of Nature. It was conducted
in the laboratory of Tyler Jacks, director of the Center for Cancer Research,
the David H. Koch Professor of Biology and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
investigator.
P53 has long
been known to play a critical role in the development of many tumors-it
is mutated in more than 50 percent of human cancers. Researchers have identified
a few compounds that restore p53 function, but until now, it has not been
known whether such activity would actually reverse tumor growth in primary
tumors.
The new MIT
study shows that re-activating p53 in mouse tumors dramatically reduces
the size of the tumors, in some cases by 100 percent.
"This study
provides critical genetic evidence that continuous repression of a tumor
suppressor gene is required for a tumor to survive," said Andrea Ventura,
an Italian postdoctoral associate in the Center for Cancer Research and
first author of the paper.
In normal cells,
p53 controls the cell cycle. In other words, when functioning properly,
it activates DNA repair mechanisms and prevents cells with damaged DNA
from dividing. If DNA damage is irreparable, p53 induces the cell to destroy
itself by undergoing apoptosis, or programmed cell death.
When p53 is
turned off by mutation or deletion, cells are much more likely to become
cancerous, because they will divide uncontrollably even when DNA is damaged.
In this study,
the researchers used engineered mice that had the gene for p53 turned off.
But, they also included a genetic "switch" that allowed the researchers
to turn p53 back on after tumors developed.
Once the switch
was activated, p53 appeared in the tumor cells and the majority of the
tumors shrank between 40 and 100 percent.
The researchers
looked at two different types of cancer-lymphomas and sarcomas. In lymphomas,
or cancers of the white blood cells, the cancer cells underwent apoptosis
within 1 or 2 days of the p53 reactivation.
In contrast,
sarcomas (which affect connective tissues) did not undergo apoptosis but
went into a state of senescence, or no growth. Those tumors took longer
to shrink but the senescent tumor cells were eventually cleared away.
The researchers
are not sure why these two cancers are affected in different ways, but
they have started trying to figure it out by identifying the other genes
that are activated in each type of tumor when p53 turns back on.
The study also
revealed that turning on p53 has no damaging effects in normal cells. The
researchers had worried that p53 would kill normal cells because it had
never been expressed in those cells.
"This means
you can design drugs that restore p53 and you don't have to worry too much
about toxic side effects," said Ventura.
Possible therapeutic
approaches to turn on p53 in human cancer cells include small molecules
that restore mutated p53 proteins to a functional state, as well as gene
therapy techniques that introduce a new copy of the p53 gene into tumor
cells. One class of potential drugs now under investigation, known as nutlins,
acts by interfering with MDM2, an enzyme that keeps p53 levels low.
In follow-up
studies, the MIT researchers are looking at other types of cancer, such
as epithelial (skin) cancer, in their mouse model, and they plan to see
if the same approach will also work for tumor suppressors other than p53.
This research
was funded by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the National Cancer
Institute, the American Italian Cancer Research Foundation and the Leaf
Fund.
Note: This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.
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