Islamabad, Jan 27 : Pancreatic cancer is a particularly
challenging one to beat; it has a tendency to spread and harbors cancer stem
cells that stubbornly resist conventional approaches to therapy. Now,
researchers reporting in the November issue of Cell Stem Cell, a Cell Press
publication, have evidence to suggest there is a way to kill off those cancer
stem cells.
The target is a self-renewal pathway known for its role not
in cancer but in embryonic stem cells.
"I don't think the cancer stem
cells have any direct link to embryonic development, rather they are using this
developmental pathway for their uncontrolled self-renewal capacity," said
Christopher Heeschen of the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre in Madrid.
"This pathway is completely inactive in adult tissue. We've checked many tissues
and there is zero -- no detectable expression at all."
The so-called
Nodal/Activin pathway's embryonic ties and absence from other tissues present a
real opportunity. It suggests you could target the molecular pathway without
harming other adult cells. Heeschen's team has now shown that approach to
therapy does seem to work in mice.
They first demonstrated the important
role of the Nodal/Activin pathway in cancer stem cells derived from human
pancreatic cancer. When that signal was blocked, normally resistant pancreatic
cancer stem cells became sensitive to chemotherapy.
The researchers then
moved on to experiments in mice with established tumors seeded from human cancer
cells. Treatment of those animals with the pathway inhibitor plus standard
chemotherapy eliminated those stem cells.
"The dual combination therapy
worked strikingly well," Heeschen said. "The mice responded with 100 percent
survival after 100 days." That's compared to mice not receiving the therapy,
which bore large tumors and died within 40 days of implantation.
That
two-part treatment wasn't enough to tackle pancreatic cancer when intact tumor
tissue was implanted into mice as opposed to just cancer cells, the researchers
found. Heeschen says that's because those cells were nestled within a supportive
"stroma." That protective tissue delivered the Activin signal and prevented the
drug combination from reaching the cells.
To get around that, Heeschen
and his colleagues added a third ingredient to therapy, an inhibitor intended to
target the stroma. The three-pronged approach translated into long-term,
progression-free survival for the mice.
Interestingly, Heeschen says the
animals' tumors didn't show signs of shrinking even as they were defeated. "They
were more or less dead tissue. They were senescent with no cancer stem cells --
just sitting there," he said.
Those tissues apparently had no ability to
form new tumors. The findings suggest that tumor regression isn't always the key
thing to look for. It also shows that drugs designed to target cancer stem cells
alone are promising, but only in combination with other drugs.
"The
concept that you can hit cancer stem cells and tumors will melt away must be
abandoned," Heeschen said. "You have to treat the entire cancer -- the stroma,
cancer stem cells and differentiated cells -- as a complex. "
Heeschen
says there are hints that this embryonic pathway might have important roles in
other forms of cancer, including breast, lung and colorectal cancers. That's
something they will now test in further
studies.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Embryonic signal drives pancreatic cancer and offers a way to kill it
Embryonic signal drives pancreatic cancer and offers a way to kill it
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