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Topic Name: How cancer cell move
Category: Biomedical
Research persons: Dr. Robert Grosse
Location: Heidelberg, Germany
Details
Researchers in Heidelberg discover new protein that is suppressed in
particularly aggressive cancer cell.
If cancer cells lack a certain protein, it could be much easier for them to
penetrate healthy body tissue, the first step towards forming metastases.
Scientists at the Pharmacology Institute of the University of Heidelberg have
discovered the previously unknown cell signal factor SCAI (suppressor of cancer
cell invasion), which inhibits the movement and spread of tumor cells in
laboratory tests. When the factor’s functioning was disrupted, the cancer cells
moved much more effectively in what are known as three-dimensional matrix
systems, which imitate some of the tissue properties of the human body.
“The protein is apparently suppressed in many types of tumors, e.g. breast,
lung, or thyroid,” explains Dr. Robert Grosse, head of the Emmy Noether Junior
Research Group funded by the German Research Association (DFG) at the
Pharmacology Institute. The new factor could be an interesting starting point
for research into new mechanisms for fighting cancer. The research team’s
results have now been published online in the prestigious international journal
Nature Cell Biology.
Focus on particularly aggressive cancers
Tumor cells are extremely mobile and “adept” at penetrating healthy tissue to
form metastases. They adapt to the consistency of the respective tissue by
changing their shapes constantly and attach flexibly to surrounding tissues
during movement with the help of special surface structures (receptors).
One of these receptors is what is known as b1-integrin, which is frequently
formed in many tumors such as metastasizing breast cancer. “The cell signal
factor SCAI controls the formation and function of b1-integrin,” says Dr. Robert
Grosse. “If there is too little SCAI in tumor cells, then b1-integrin is
overactive, so to speak. The cell can change more rapidly to a more aggressive
form and penetrate surrounding tissue, a crucial step toward increased spreading
of the tumor and the possible formation of metastases.”
In their recently published study, the Heidelberg researchers examined cells
from skin cancer (melanoma) and breast cancer. In other projects, Dr. Robert
Grosse’s team would like to study the function of the signal factor SCAI more
closely in an animal model. “If the function of SCAI is confirmed to be decisive
in the formation of especially aggressive tumor cells, this could be a promising
starting point for developing new diagnostic methods or medication,” says the
pharmacologist. It could also be possible to develop an agent that prevents the
genetic suppression of the signal factor in cancer cells. But first the
researchers need to better understand how the signal factor itself is regulated
in the cell.
| Tags: |
Tumor Cell - cancer cell - suppressor of cancer
cell invasion - - |
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