Islamabad, Feb 5 : A new family of proteins which regulate the human body’s ‘hypoxic
response’ to low levels of oxygen has been discovered by scientists at Barts
Cancer Institute at Queen Mary, University of London and The University of
Nottingham.
The discovery has been published in the international journal
Nature Cell Biology. It marks a significant step towards understanding the
complex processes involved in the hypoxic response which, when it malfunctions,
can cause and affect the progress of many types of serious disease, including
cancer.
The researchers have uncovered a previously unknown level of
hypoxic regulation at a molecular level in human cells which could provide a
novel pathway for the development of new drug therapeutics to fight disease. The
cutting-edge work was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences
Research Council (BBSRC).
Proteins are biochemical compounds which carry
out specific duties within the living cell. Every cell in our body has the
ability to recognise and respond to changes in the availability of oxygen. The
best example of this is when we climb to high altitudes where the air contains
less oxygen. The cells recognise the decrease in oxygen via the bloodstream and
are able to react, using the ‘hypoxic response’, to produce a protein called
EPO. This protein in turn stimulates the body to produce more red blood cells to
absorb as much of the reduced levels of oxygen as possible.
This response
is essential for a normal healthy physiology but when the hypoxic response in
cells malfunctions, diseases like cancer can develop and spread. Cancer cells
have a faulty hypoxic response which means that as the cells multiply they
highjack the response to create their own rogue blood supply. In this way the
cells can form large tumours. The new blood supply also helps the cancer cells
spread to other parts of the body, called ‘metastasis’, which is how ultimately
cancer kills patients.
The scientists have identified a new family of
hypoxic regulator proteins called ‘LIM domain containing proteins’ which
function as molecular scaffolds or ‘adapters’ bringing together or bridging two
key enzymes in the hypoxic response pathway, namely PHD2 and VHL. Both of these
are involved in down-regulating the master regulator protein called
Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIF1). The research has shown that loss of LIMD1
breaks down the bridge it creates between PHD2 and VHL and this then enables the
master regulator to function out of control and thus contribute to cancer
formation.
Molecular Oncologist, Dr Tyson Sharp, who carried out research
for the project at The University of Nottingham’s School of Biomedical Sciences,
said: “The results from this research represent a significant advancement in our
understanding of precisely how the hypoxic response works. It will help
researchers develop better drugs to fight cancer and also other human diseases
that are caused by low levels of oxygen within our body such as anaemia,
myocardial infarction (heart attack), stroke and peripheral arterial disease.
Further work in this fascinating area is now continuing at Barts Cancer
Institute at Queen Mary University of London and will form the basis of a whole
new additional research theme for my
group.”
Ends
SA/EN
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Cutting off the oxygen supply to serious diseases
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