http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-07/haog-nsc070610.php
In their latest research, scientists of the Max Delbrьck Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC)
Berlin-Buch, Germany, have demonstrated how the brain's own stem cells and precursor cells
control the growth of glioblastomas. Of all brain tumors, glioblastomas are among the most
common and most aggressive. Dr. Sridhar Reddy Chirasani, Professor Helmut Kettenmann and Dr.
Rainer Glass (all MDC) and Dr. Michael Synowitz (Charitй – Universitдtsmedizin Berlin)
have now shown in cell culture and mouse model experiments just how the body's own protective
mechanism they identified in an earlier study, actually works (Brain, July 6, 2010,
doi:10.1093/brain/awq128)*.
Glioblastomas are brain tumors that are most common in adults in their mid-fifties or early
sixties. The causes for developing the disease are not yet known. Researchers assume that
misdirected neural stem cells / precursor cells mutate into cancer cells and can form
glioblastomas.
Several years ago the MDC and Charit researchers were able to show that normal stem cell/
precursor cells of the brain attack the tumor. Apparently, the tumor itself entices these stem
cells to migrate over relatively long distances from the stem cell niches of the brain. Why this
is so is unclear. Moreover, the researchers still do not know which substance attract the stem
cells to the tumor. However, now they have discovered how the stem cells keep the tumor in
check.
Stem cell protein induces signaling in glioblastoma cells
The scientists showed that the neural stem cells and neural precursor cells release a protein
that belongs to the family of the BMP proteins (bone morphogenetic protein). This protein
received its name for its ability to induce bone and cartilage tissue formation, the first
characteristic that was known about it. However, BMP is active in the entire organism –
even in the brain.
Neural stem cells release BMP-7 in the brain in the vicinity of the glioblastoma cells. The
protein influences a small population of cancer cells, the so-called tumor stem cells. The
current consensus of researchers is that these tumor stem cells are the actual cause for the
continuous tumor self-renewal in the brain. A small quantity of these cells is sufficient to
form new tumors again even after surgery. BMP-7 induces signaling in the tumor stem cells,
causing them to differentiate. This means that they are no longer tumor stem cells.
However, the activity of stem cells in the brain and thus of the body's own protective
mechanism against glioblastomas diminishes with increasing age. This could explain why the
tumors usually develop in older adults and not in children and young people.
Aim – the destruction of tumor stem cells
The discovery of the tumor stem cells has led to new concepts in the therapy of glioblastomas.
"Normal cancer cells" can be destroyed using conventional therapies (surgery,
radiation, chemotherapy), which are seldom successful in tumor stem cells. The aim is therefore
to develop therapy concepts to destroy these tumor stem cells. The findings from the mouse
experiments of the researchers in Berlin could point to a new approach: reprogramming tumor stem
cells into less harmful cells, which could then be destroyed with a therapy.
July 6, 2010 (EurekAlert)