Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory scientists trace a novel way cells are disrupted in cancer
A research team at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) is clarifying a previously unappreciated way that cellular processes are disrupted in cancer. Last year, scientists from the same CHSL team discovered that a "splicing factor" called SF2/ASF--a protein that changes the instructions for how other proteins are assembled--can induce tumors in cell cultures. The team's newly published results show that, in ways not yet fully understood, this same splicing factor acts on a group of other molecules that has long been known to affect cancer.
A Cascade of Molecular Interactions Leading to Cancer
Understanding such complex molecular interactions may one day lead to new approaches to cancer treatment. Cancers are enormously complex, and eventually, in most instances, they find ways of disrupting a large fraction of cellular processes. To untangle and reverse the changes, researchers seek to identify sequences of events in which molecules each affect one another in turn, ultimately inducing cancer-cell behavior.
For example, one protein may affect another by chemically disabling it, or by slowing the gene expression that produces it from the "instructions" contained in DNA. A drug that blocks any step in such a "pathway" has a chance to slow or prevent the disease.
Until recently, however, cancer researchers have paid scant attention to factors that affect others through "alternative splicing," a mechanism that changes how DNA instructions are cut and pasted together at the level of RNA intermediaries to form final templates for the production of proteins.
"Splicing is a critical step in gene expression," said Adrian R. Krainer, Ph.D., a CSHL professor who is an expert on RNA splicing. "Like other steps in gene expression, it seems to malfunction in cancer." Last year, Krainer and his colleagues found that several known splicing factors are present at higher-than-normal levels in some tumors. For example, a factor known as SF2/ASF was elevated in more than 20% of lung and colon tumors. Moreover, laboratory cultures of mouse or rat cells developed characteristics of tumors when they were programmed to make higher-than-normal levels of this splicing factor.
Changes in the PI3K-mTOR Pathway
In the new research, Krainer's team looked for specific molecules whose concentrations or enzymatic activities changed in cells in which SF2/ASF induced cancer. They found changes in some proteins in a group known as the PI3K-mTOR pathway, which is well known for its involvement in cancers.
The team speculated that SF2/ASF, as it influences how a gene's instructions are translated into protein, might cause a protein to be assembled without a key section that is normally modified by other proteins in the pathway. Krainer cautioned that the splicing factor may act on other proteins or in other ways in the cell, so further research is needed. Nonetheless, the team's research suggests that measuring SF2/ASF levels could eventually lead to a way to identify patients who will respond to existing drugs that block the PI3K-mTOR pathway.
Source: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Related
- CSHL team traces extensive networks regulating alternative RNA splicingFri, 19 Sep 2008, 22:14:51 EDT
- Cold Spring Harbor science teams identify 13 new tumor-suppressor genes in liver cancerTue, 18 Nov 2008, 17:36:35 EST
- CSHL scientists identify new drug target against virulent type of breast cancerMon, 25 Aug 2008, 11:16:05 EDT
- CSHL scientists trace causal link between a tumor suppressor gene and liver cancerTue, 3 Jun 2008, 15:42:40 EDT
- CSHL scientists show how a protein that determines cell polarity prevents breast cancerWed, 26 Nov 2008, 15:35:54 EST
Other sources
- Scientists Trace A Novel Way Cells Are Disrupted In Cancerfrom Science DailyTue, 7 Oct 2008, 20:14:17 EDT
- Scientists trace a novel way cells are disrupted in cancerfrom Science CentricTue, 7 Oct 2008, 3:49:44 EDT
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox!Learn more about
Popular science news articles
No popular news yet
No popular news yet
- Beyond sunlight: Explorers census 17,650 ocean species between edge of darkness and black abyss
- Implant-based cancer vaccine is first to eliminate tumors in mice
- Surface bacteria maintain skin's healthy balance
- Is global warming unstoppable?
- Polyphenols and polyunsaturated fatty acids boost the birth of new neurons
- New evidence that dark chocolate helps ease emotional stress
- African desert rift confirmed as new ocean in the making
- Nanoparticles used in common household items caused genetic damage in mice
- New study links vitamin D deficiency to cardiovascular disease and death
- Therapy 32 times more cost effective at increasing happiness than money