.         Israelis?  I was certain it would be a Muslim!

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Israelis find key to containing cancer

 <http://www.addthis.com/bookmark.php?v=20> Bookmark and Share

By Abigail Klein Leichman 
May 02, 2011

 

Hebrew University researchers discover how a single gene can keep malignant
cells from spreading to healthy tissue.

p53

Reprinted with permission of Nature, Macmillan Publishers 2011

The red cells, tumor "micro-islands," express a p53-suppressed gene. The
green cells are rapidly proliferating due to p53 deficiency.

It is called simply p53, a short name that belies its starring role in
halting the spread of cancer.

Israeli scientists already knew that when it is activated, the p53 gene
produces a protein that can halt and even kill cancerous cells. Now, a team
headed by Prof. Yinon Ben-Neriah and Dr. Eli Pikarsky of the Institute for
Medical Research Israel-Canada at the
<http://research.ekmd.huji.ac.il/research_institues.asp?cat=140&in=0> Hebrew
University of Jerusalem have discovered that p53 also governs a mechanism
that keeps those deadly cells from invading healthy epithelial tissue lining
the cavities and surfaces of many internal organs.

As the researchers described in the February issue of the journal
<http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v470/n7334/full/nature09673.html>
Nature, the ability to "turn on" p53 could be a critical means of protection
against colorectal and other epithelial forms of cancer.

Engineered mice yield surprising discovery

Building on earlier p53 studies by Dr. Moshe Oren of the
<http://www.weizmann.ac.il/> Weizmann Institute of Science, who joined the
current research team, Hebrew University doctoral students Ela Elyada and
Ariel Pribluda spent six painstaking years engineering a unique mouse model
to study the effect of p53 on the cell-invasion process.

"53 has been known for 20-something years as a gene that protects against
cancer by suppressing tumors," Ben-Neriah explains to ISRAEL21c. "It has
several mechanisms to do this, and you can observe these phenomena even in a
tissue culture dish."

But his team wanted to go deeper. After developing a model that mimics
colorectal cancer in mice and removing their p53 gene, the researchers saw
something never before observed: malignant cells began invading neighboring
cells at a fast clip.

"One of the earliest signs of cancer progression is this invasion process,"
says Ben-Neriah. "Normally, it is slow. In humans, it takes 10 to 15 years
for colorectal cancer to develop. Even in mouse models, it takes at least
six months. But when we knocked out 53, we started observing the malignant
process within seven days, and it happens throughout the gut. There was
something fundamental going on that had to do with 53."

Using sophisticated tools to analyze DNA and gene expression, the
researchers found specific genes that kick off the invasion process. And
when p53 is activated, it keeps those invasion-activating genes in check.

Better and faster way to diagnose cancer

Pikarsky, one of Israel's leading pathologists, thinks it could be possible
to use invasion-activating genes as diagnostic biomarkers for determining if
a tumor is contained (benign) or invasive (malignant) at a very early stage.

Current methods cannot make this determination before the malignant cells
have already invaded surrounding tissue, typically lymph nodes.

"Using the biomarker, we could have a chance to find out without going to
the lymph nodes, and that would be a tremendous advantage," says Ben-Neriah.
Survival rates could be greatly enhanced if treatment started so early, and
people with benign tumors would get the good news much sooner.

Another possible application of their discovery -- though Ben-Neriah says
it's still just wishful thinking -- would be to boost the group-control
function of p53 to keep benign tumors from developing a spreading capacity.
This idea is now being studied at the Hebrew University researchers' labs.

 <http://www.yissum.co.il/> Yissum, the Hebrew University's technology
transfer company, is lining up investors for human studies to begin this
summer at  <http://www.hadassah.org.il/English> Hadassah Medical Center on
breast cancer patients and in Japan on gastric cancer patients.

The research was primarily funded by grants from the
<http://www.adelsonfoundation.org/amrfphil.html> Dr. Miriam and Sheldon G.
Adelson Medical Research Foundation and the  <http://www.isf.org.il/English>
Israel Science Foundation.

 



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