New therapeutic target for most common solid cancer in childhood?

Published: Monday, February 15, 2010 - 17:33 in Health & Medicine

A team of researchers, led by Patrick Mehlen, at Université de Lyon, France, has identified the protein NT-3 and the cell-surface molecule to which it binds (TrkC) as potential therapeutic targets for the treatment of neuroblastoma — the most frequent solid tumor in young children— by studying human neuroblastoma cells in vitro and after xenotransplantation into mice and chicks. In the study, NT-3 was found to be expressed at increased levels in aggressive human neuroblastomas and to block the ability of TrkC to induce tumor cell death by a process known as apoptosis. In vitro analysis of human neuroblastoma cell lines indicated that both decreasing NT-3 expression and culturing in the presence of an antibody that blocked NT-3 binding to TrkC triggered the cells to undergo apoptosis. More importantly, blocking the NT-3/TrkC interaction inhibited tumor growth and metastasis in both a chick and a mouse xenograft model of neuroblastoma. The authors therefore suggest that disrupting the NT-3/TrkC interaction might provide a new approach to treating neuroblastoma, a form of cancer for which treatment options are currently limited.

Source: Journal of Clinical Investigation

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