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Protein Suppresses Spread Of Prostate Cancer

Friday, July 20, 2007

Richard O. Hynes
Professor of Cancer Research
Photo / Donna Coveney



A protein whose function is lost in a broad array of cancers normally suppresses the spread of prostate cancer, MIT researchers and colleagues have shown. As a result, testing for loss of the protein, called Protein 4.1B, could help clinicians predict which cancers are likely to spread, or metastasize.

"If you determine that a tumor shows reduced levels of Protein 4.1B, one would know to worry more about it metastasizing and plan treatment accordingly," said Richard O. Hynes, the Daniel K. Ludwig Professor of Cancer Research at MIT and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator.

Hynes and colleagues published their findings the week of July 16-20 in the online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Protein 4.1B is a member of a family of similar proteins, many of which link proteins in the cell membrane to the cell's internal cytoskeleton. Other researchers had shown that Protein 4.1B function is frequently lost in an array of cancers, including brain, lung, and breast cancers. Hynes and colleagues had shown that the protein was also lost in highly metastatic prostate cancer cells.

To test how loss of Protein 4.1 affects tumors in living animals, the researchers implanted clumps of human prostate cancer tumors into the prostates of mice. From these mice, they isolated variants of prostate cancer cells that showed different metastatic potential. A genetic comparison of the cells revealed that the highly metastatic cells had lost Protein 4.1B gene activity. What's more, when the researchers suppressed the Protein 4.1B gene in poorly metastatic cells, they became highly metastatic.

The researchers also eliminated the gene for Protein 4.1B in mice engineered to spontaneously develop prostate cancer -- a particularly good model of prostate cancer, Hynes said, because tumors in the mice mimic human cancers as they progress from early tumor formation to metastasis. When he and his colleagues knocked out the gene for Protein 4.1B, these mice produced more invasive cancers. Studies of the metastatic cancer cells in the mice revealed that they did not divide more rapidly than cells with Protein 4.1B. Rather, Protein 4.1B appears to trigger death in metastatic cells, thereby preventing cancer from spreading.

The findings in mice are likely relevant to human prostate cancers, said Hynes, because other researchers had found Protein 4.1B to be reduced in metastatic prostate cancers, compared to normal prostate tissue.

"Our findings show that Protein 4.1B loss is causally related to the progression of prostate cancer," said Hynes. "Although such a causal link has not yet been shown in other cancers, we also believe that Protein 4.1B is a more widely significant factor in metastasis in other cancers than has been realized."

Hynes said that a clinical test for Protein 4.1B activity could be useful as part of a panel of genetic tests to assess the metastatic potential of prostate cancers.

In addition to Hynes and his colleagues at MIT, other co-authors are from The Wistar Institute and Tufts School of Veterinary Medicine.

The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, the Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Fund for Cancer Research, the Prostate Cancer Foundation, the National Cancer Institute, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, and a David H. Koch Research Fellowship from MIT's Center for Cancer Research.

Source: MIT

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