Protein thought to promote cancer instead functions as a tumor suppressor
A protein previously thought to promote colorectal cancer instead suppresses the growth of human cancer cells in culture, researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have found. "This finding reshapes a fundamental model of how colorectal cancer arises," said Dr. Lawrence Lum, assistant professor of cell biology at UT Southwestern and senior author of the study, which appears online today and in a future issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Approximately 90 percent of colorectal cancers are caused by a biochemical malfunction that arises from mutations in a gene that activates a gene called TCF7L2, Dr. Lum said. As a result, TCF7L2 has been suspected of helping to trigger colorectal cancer.
In the current study, the researchers used a novel genetic screening approach known as RNAi mediated interference, or RNAi, to identify genes that contributed to this malfunction.
The researchers employed more than 80,000 small snippets of chemically synthesized RNAs (ribonucleic acids) known as "small interfering RNAs" or siRNAs, that are each capable of inactivating a specific gene. The researchers mixed these siRNAs with specially engineered human cancer cells that glowed when the cancer-causing malfunction is activated. When an siRNA made a cell glow, the researchers were able to flag the gene as a candidate cancer gene.
As the researchers examined the genes of interest more closely, they unexpectedly found that a gene called TCF7L2, which had been thought to boost malignant cell growth, instead suppressed it. When the gene was inactivated, human colorectal cancer cells grew more rapidly in culture and emitted a stronger glow.
"The function of TCF7L2 in cancer was previously determined from studies in animals but no one has genetically tested its role in human colorectal cancer cells before," said Dr. Lum, who is a Virginia Murchison Linthicum Scholar in Medical Research. "Prior to the advent of RNAi technology, this was very difficult to do in human cultured cells."
The next step is to understand more fully all the steps in the biochemical pathway involved in controlling the action of TCF7L2. This knowledge could then be used to identify new therapeutic targets for treating colorectal cancer. Therapeutic strategies derived from such studies may also be useful in treating type II diabetes, for which risk is strongly associated with mutations in TCF7L2, Dr. Lum said.
Dr. Lum noted that the findings about TCF7L2 show the effectiveness of this high throughput screening technique, which can quickly and systematically check many thousands of genes.
The success of this relatively new screening method for identifying candidate cancer genes demonstrates its usefulness to understanding human disease, Dr. Lum said.
"It's a way to analyze human gene action directly in human tissue at a genome-scale," he said.
Source: UT Southwestern Medical Center
Related
- Stabilizing cancer-fighting p53 can also shield a metastasis-promoterThu, 22 May 2008, 13:14:38 EDT
- Instead of fighting breast cancer, immune cell promotes its spreadWed, 22 Apr 2009, 10:51:50 EDT
- Johns Hopkins scientists pull protein's tail to curtail cancerTue, 30 Dec 2008, 17:42:34 EST
- Oncogene inhibits tumor suppressor to promote cancer: Study links B-RAF and LKB1Thu, 29 Jan 2009, 15:45:54 EST
- DKK-3 and WIF-1: Proteins related to liver cancer development?Mon, 15 Jun 2009, 9:15:23 EDT
Learn more about
Articles on the same topic
- Bacterial peptide provides new insight into common tumor suppressorMon, 7 Jul 2008, 12:42:52 EDT
Other sources
- Protein Thought To Promote Cancer Instead Functions As Tumor Suppressorfrom Science DailyTue, 8 Jul 2008, 9:21:15 EDT
- Protein thought to promote cancer instead functions as a tumor suppressorfrom PhysorgMon, 7 Jul 2008, 17:35:16 EDT
- Protein Thought to Promote Cancer Instead Functions as a Tumor Suppressorfrom Newswise - ScinewsMon, 7 Jul 2008, 17:35:11 EDT
- Protein thought to promote cancer instead functions as a tumour suppressorfrom Science CentricMon, 7 Jul 2008, 17:21:07 EDT
- Bacterial Peptide Provides New Insight Into Common Tumor Suppressorfrom Science DailyMon, 7 Jul 2008, 13:28:29 EDT
- Bacterial peptide provides new insight into common tumour suppressorfrom Science CentricMon, 7 Jul 2008, 13:28:06 EDT
- Bacterial peptide provides new insight into common tumor suppressorfrom PhysorgMon, 7 Jul 2008, 12:42:06 EDT
Sponsored links
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Previous article
Lay your eggs hereBreaking science news
- Climate change and the mystery of the shrinking sheepThu, 2 Jul 2009, 14:31:49 EDT
- Rare sheep could be key to better diagnostic tests in developing world, says Stanford studySat, 4 Jul 2009, 4:22:05 EDT
- 'Jumping gene' diminishes the effect of a new type 2 diabetes risk geneFri, 3 Jul 2009, 3:09:05 EDT
Popular science news articles
- What really prompts the dog's 'guilty look'
- Red giant star Betelgeuse is mysteriously shrinking
- Green tea may affect prostate cancer progression
- Study finds that tobacco companies changed design of cigarettes without alerting smokers
- Got ear plugs? You may want to sport them on the subway and other mass transit, researchers say
No popular news yet
- Magic ingredient in breast milk protects babies' intestines
- Lack of sleep could be more dangerous for women than men
- OJ worse for teeth than whitening says Eastman Institute researchers
- For women with PCOS, acupuncture and exercise may bring relief, reduce risks
- UNC study: Aerobic activity may keep the brain young
