A New Cellular Pathway Linked to Cancer Is Identified by NYU Langone Researchers
July 24, 2008
A New Cellular
Pathway Linked to Cancer Is Identified by NYU Langone Researchers
Finding May Be Used to Sensitize Cells to Chemotherapy

“One of the major
messages of this study is that we have a new pathway that responds to DNA
damage,” says Michele Pagano, M.D., the May Ellen and Gerald Jay Ritter
Professor of Oncology and Professor of Pathology at NYU School of Medicine, who
was recently appointed a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator. “It is
already known that the three major protein players in this pathway are
deregulated in human cancers, so deregulation of this pathway is probably going
to contribute to tumorigenesis (the development of cancer).”
DNA damage can be
caused by carcinogens in the environment, errors in DNA replication, or
glitches in the cellular machinery caused by aging, among other factors. If a
cell detects DNA damage when it is about to divide, it activates the so-called
G2 checkpoint, a pause button that allows the cell time to correct the problem
before cell division, the process whereby a cell makes two copies of itself.
The cell maintains a paused state based on a series of proteins, a pathway,
that work together like gears in a machine. Some are switched on and others are
turned off (often by degradation) to maintain the checkpoint.
In addition to
the new pathway’s association with cancer, it suggests a potentially new way to
sensitize cells to chemotherapy, says Dr. Pagano. Tumor cells already have a
less efficient checkpoint because of defects in other regulatory pathways. Up
to 60% of cancers, for example, have mutations in p53, a tumor suppressor gene
and G2 checkpoint regulator that operates in a separate pathway.
Inhibiting this new pathway with a drug could make cancer cells especially vulnerable to DNA damage, causing cancerous cells to die rather than pausing to correct the problem, Dr. Pagano says. Unlike cancer cells, which already have a less efficient checkpoint, normal cells have a fully functioning G2 checkpoint and divide less frequently, sparing them from drug-induced cell death.
Once APC/C is turned on, it tags its target, Plk1, for
disposal. If Plk1 remains active, the cell will continue to divide. Unlike the
G2 checkpoint pathways that have been previously described, the researchers
believe this one is “ancient” because it is evolutionarily conserved in
organisms from yeast to humans.
According to the
study, the deregulation of these three pathway components (Cdc14B, APC/C, and
Plk1) in cancer cells correlates with lower survival rates in patients.
Researchers will need to perform further studies to determine how these
proteins are altered in cancer. Some of the effect might be due to changes in
the levels of proteins expressed, but it is currently unknown whether mutations
to these proteins might also play a role.
picture above: In response to DNA damage, cells must arrest the cell cycle and initiate repair to protect genomic integrity. Dr. Pagano and colleagues unraveled a new pathway in the G2 DNA damage response. This image shows some of the events that occur in the nucleus involving this pathway.
CONTACT:
Jennifer Berman
NYU Cancer Institute
Jennifer.berman@nyumc.org
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