Much as the
famed starship Enterprise would deploy a
deflector shield to evade enemy attack,
tumor cells are capable of switching on
a molecular force field of their own to
fend off treatments aimed at killing
them. Now University of Florida
researchers have found a chink in their
armor.
The
cells churn out an enzyme that bonds
with a protein, creating a protective
barrier that deflects damage from
radiation or chemotherapy and promotes
tumor cell survival. But in laboratory
experiments, UF scientists were able to
block the union, and the malignant cells
died. The findings are opening new
avenues of research that could lead to
improved cancer therapies, the
researchers report this week in the
journal Cancer Research.
“We have
found a gene called focal adhesion
kinase which is produced at very high
levels in human tumors, and our work has
shown this makes the tumors more likely
to survive as they spread throughout the
body and grow,” said Dr. William G.
Cance, a researcher at the University of
Florida Shands Cancer Center and
chairman of the department of surgery at
UF’s College of Medicine. “It also makes
them more resistant to our attempts to
kill them. And we’re trying to
understand exactly why this gene, which
is a small enzyme molecule, is very
intimately associated with tumor cell
survival.”
Focal
adhesion kinase, or FAK, is commanding
increasing attention and has spawned a
flurry of research designed to develop
new drug therapies, said Cance, who is
known internationally for his genetic
investigations of tumor survival. These
medicines would prevent FAK from linking
with the protein known as vascular
endothelial growth factor receptor 3, or
VEGFR-3. The protein is tied to the
growth of channels in the lymph system
that serve as cellular superhighways for
cancer spread and is found in breast,
colon and thyroid tumors.
Cance
and colleagues were the first to pull
FAK out of human tumors and to show that
human cancers make the molecule in large
quantities. In 1996, the team was the
first to show that if a tumor is
prevented from producing the enzyme it
dies. The scientists also have
identified some protein receptors FAK
binds to; VEGFR-
3 is the latest they’ve discovered and
represents a “hot area for developing
therapeutics,” Cance said.
“We’ve
shown that if you disrupt this
interaction — if you block the binding
of these two proteins — the tumor cells
are more prone to being killed,” he
said.
UF
researchers identified FAK’s interaction
with VEGFR-3 in cell cultures of human
breast cancer. Breast cancers that pump
out high volumes of FAK and VEGFR-3 are
more aggressive tumors, Cance said. The
scientists were able to block FAK from
binding with VEGFR-3 by introducing a
different protein that stopped cancer
cells from dividing and caused them to
die but spared normal breast cells.
“FAK is
a critical molecule, and in the future
different ways of targeting either the
enzyme itself or targeting the binding
between these various proteins will have
a major impact on cancer, I believe,”
Cance said. “We think it’s one of the
Achilles’ heels for tumor cells and you
can disrupt it in a number of different
ways. For example, we might be able to
design drugs that mimic this area of
binding and disrupt it in patients.”
Because
normal cells generate much lower levels
of FAK than tumor cells do, treatments
could be developed to target FAK and
VEGFR-3 at dosages markedly less toxic
to healthy tissues yet lethal to cancer.
“We have
a therapeutic window,” said Cance, the
study’s senior investigator. “In normal
cells we’ve shown you can knock it out
and cells can still resist the loss of
expression of focal adhesion kinase,
whereas the tumor cells use it as one of
their major proteins for survival.”
UF
surgical resident Dr. Christopher Garces,
and UF research assistant professors
Elena Kurenova, and Vita Golubovskaya,
also were involved in the work, funded
by the National Cancer Institute.
“We take
our patients, we look at their tumors
and we try to find clues to why their
tumors grow, why their tumors spread,
and we look at the various genes and
proteins that make their tumors what
they are,” Cance said. “So from the
patient’s standpoint, the more that we
can characterize their tumor and
understand why it behaves like it does,
the greater chance we’ll then be able to
go back to the patient with
therapeutics, and that laboratory bench
to bedside is what our research is all
about.”
Dr. H.
Shelton Earp III, director of the
Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center
at the University of North
Carolina-Chapel Hill, said, “The Cance
lab finding follows on their
groundbreaking work showing that human
tumors survive in part by overexpressing
FAK. This current discovery provides an
important clue as to how to exploit this
overexpression for the therapy of human
cancers.”
Steven
Frisch, a professor of biochemistry and
molecular pharmacology at West Virginia
University, said the research raises
“the compelling possibility of targeting
FAK for a novel cancer therapy.”
“FAK
plays a major role in the survival of
tumor cells in their normal attached
state, and, when over-expressed or
hyperactivated, it opens a molecular
gate that allows tumor cells to detach
and metastasize,” Frisch said. “The
Cance lab’s new observations on the
VEGFR3-FAK interaction are both of
interest for understanding the functions
of these two pivotal molecules in cell
behavior, as well as sharpening the
focus of FAK-based drug discovery
efforts to control cancer.”
Source:
University Of Florida
Published on 11th
February 2006