New Drug Target Found for Lung Cancer
The scientists discovered that blocking the activity
of the enzyme IKK2, which helps activate the body's inflammation response,
slowed the growth of tumors in mice with lung cancer and increased their
lifespan.
The findings, reported February 12 in Nature Cell Biology,
suggest that drugs that hinder the ability of the enzyme to command cellular
activity might prove effective as lung cancer therapies.
"Lung cancer is one of most lethal
cancers and prognosis for patients is often poor, with only about 15 percent
surviving more than 5 years," says Inder Verma, Salk's American Cancer
Society Professor of Molecular Biology and lead author of the paper. "We
developed a new method of initiating lung cancer in mice, which has properties
associated with human lung cancer, and used this model to identify the role of
this enzyme in cancer proliferation. We believe that this research could one
day lead to therapies that improve the outlook for lung cancer patients."
Scientists have long known that there is a
link between cancer and inflammation, the body's first line of defense against
infection. Some of the same biochemical players that protect the body by
controlling the inflammation response of cells can also be hijacked by genetic
mutations involved in the development of cancer.
To better understand how these normally
helpful components of the immune system are put to nefarious tasks in cancer
cells, Verma and his colleagues developed a new method of inducing
non-small-cell lung cancer in mice. This type accounts for as much as 80
percent of all lung cancer cases.
The researchers used a modified virus to
insert genetic mutations into cells lining the mice's lungs, causing the
animals to develop tumors. This laid the groundwork for studies on the
molecular causes of this specific cancer type that would be impossible in
humans.
They then turned their attention to a
protein complex, NF-KB, that initiates the inflammation response to infection
by orchestrating a cell's genetic activity. Malfunctioning regulation of NF-KB
has been linked to various types of cancer, including lung cancer, but due to
its many functions in the cell, drugs that directly target NF-KB would likely
cause severe side effects.
To get around this limitation, the Salk
researchers focused on IKK2, an enzyme that spurs NF-KB's activity in response
to stress. When they blocked IKK2 activity in the mice with lung cancer, the
mice had smaller tumors and lived longer, suggesting that the enzyme is
necessary for NF-KB to stimulate tumor growth.
"Now that we understand IKK2 is
required for NF-KB to promote tumor growth, we hope to find ways to target its
activity with drugs," says Yifeng Xia, a postdoctoral researcher in
Verma's lab and first author on the paper. "Systemically and chronically
blocking IKK2 activity is too toxic to be used in chemotherapy, but we might be
able to target another molecule in the signaling pathway by which IKK2
regulates tumor growth."
The researchers also showed that Timp-1, a
gene involved in regulating cell growth, carries orders from NF-KB to tell lung
cancer cells to proliferate. When they suppressed the expression of the gene,
the mice with lung cancer had smaller tumors and survived longer.
"The next step is to develop
antibodies or other types of drugs that can neutralize Timp-1 to abolish its
pro-proliferation role in lung cancer," says Xia.
The Salk scientists now hope to develop a
mouse model of small cell lung cancer, a more aggressive form of the disease
that's been linked to smoking. They will then test whether the potential drug
targets they discovered in this study would be relevant for this more deadly
cancer.
Raquel Bernardino, M4714
O cancro do pulmão é o tipo de cancro mais letal em todo o mundo, afeta uma grande parte da população, e muito se tem estudado sobre esta patologia. Este estudo pode abrir portas para o tratamento de alguns tipos de cancro do pulmão, através da produção de fármacos com o intuito de interferirem com enzimas envolvidas no processo inflamatório característico do cancro.
ResponderEliminarRaquel Bernardino, M4714