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A potent suppressor of endometrial cancer
The normal endometrium is a dynamic place, providing a thick, highly vascularized environment ready to generate a placenta if it is implanted with an embryo. The dynamic and cyclic activity of the endometrium makes it very sensitive to signaling molecules. Early changes in many signaling proteins are known to contribute to endometrial cancer in some patients. A major research goal is to understand how signals create cancer cells and to identify places where intervention might shut down the signals that promote cancer cell survival and growth. Scientists learn about cancer by creating genetic changes to signaling proteins in mice that reflect changes found in human cancer patients. Animal models are produced in this way to help understand how cancer cells form and progress. One challenge is to localize genetic changes to the environment of interest. In the case of endometrial cancer, scientists need to specifically modify only those cells that are in the endometrium, so that their data is not complicated by changes in other tissues. In a newly released study published in Disease Models & Mechanisms (DMM), Very few genetic changes act alone to induce cancer. Most cancer cells result from multiple mutations. However, all mice deficient for just Lkb1, exhibited malignant changes throughout their entire endometrium. "In most mouse cancer models, one creates a tumor prone condition. But additional mutations are commonly mandatory for a cell to develop a cancer" says Dr. Castrillon, "What is surprising about the Lkb1 model, is that their entire endometrium becomes cancerous. It happens very early and rapidly." The rapid development of cancer in mice without Lkb1 suggests that this gene or the molecules that its product regulates appears to be valuable targets for future treatment. The authors show that treating the mice with a drug that blocks a downstream target of the Lkb1 product kills tumor cells, leading to tumor shrinkage and dramatic recovery of the mice. "It is likely that this pathway is very important. We think that Lkb1 mutations or mutations in other steps in this pathway represent some type of metabolic abnormality that we could take advantage of [for therapeutic intervention]" says Dr. Castrillon. Posted by: Andria Source |
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