http://www.usnews.com/science/articles/2010/08/02/disabling-cellular-assassin-prevents-cancer.html
Counterintuitive experiment may help explain why survivors are more vulnerable to other
malignancies
Being overly protective can backfire. That’s a lesson that many parents have learned and
cancer biologists are beginning to recognize.
Killing off damaged cells is supposed to help protect against cancer, but two new studies show
that a massive die-off can lead to the disease instead. The findings, published in the August 1
Genes & Development, may have implications for certain types of cancer therapies, including
radiation treatment.
Previous research has demonstrated the importance of p53, a protein that acts as a cell’s
security system. The protein senses when a cell is under extreme stress, such as that caused by
DNA damage, and dispatches other proteins to deal with the problem in several ways. Some of
p53’s minions halt cell growth while others attempt to repair the damage. When all else
fails, p53 unleashes Puma, a protein that sets in motion a cell-suicide program called
apoptosis.
Apoptosis has long been thought to be one of the most important defenses against cancer,
perhaps the most important. So researchers fully expected that mice lacking the Puma protein,
and thus the ability to kill damaged cells, would be highly susceptible to cancer after
radiation treatment. But in science, even when the result seems like a foregone conclusion, the
experiment still has to be done.
So two groups of researchers independently tested the ability of mice genetically engineered to
lack the Puma protein to withstand repeated rounds of cancer-inducing radiation exposure.
“It seemed a good way to give a Ph.D. student a solid, but not overly exciting
paper,” says Andreas Strasser, a cancer biologist at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute
of Medical Research in Melbourne, Australia, who led one of the groups.
Instead of being riddled with cancer, mice lacking Puma “got no tumors at all”
after repeated rounds of radiation exposure, Strasser says.
That left researchers with two possibilities: “Either you’ve snuffed up badly, or
something exciting is going on,” he says. Repeating the experiment gave the same result;
mice lacking Puma seemed impervious to DNA damage caused by radiation. Another group led by
Andreas Villunger, a molecular biologist at Innsbruck Medical University in Austria, found the
same result independently.
“The fact that this was found by both groups separately gives added credibility” to
the result, says Robert Weinberg, a molecular cancer researcher at MIT’s Whitehead
Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Mass.
But mice with intact Puma — which should have been protected against cancer —
developed lymphoma after a couple of rounds of radiation. Both groups of researchers traced the
source of the lymphoma to overworked stem cells in the bone marrow.
Under normal conditions, radiation causes so much damage to DNA that blood cells can’t
cope and turn on Puma’s cell-suicide program. In that way, about 80 percent of mature
blood cells die after a massive dose of radiation.
Surviving stem cells have to “first deal with the DNA damage from radiation, and then
they have to expand [their numbers] and regenerate like crazy making new blood cells to save the
animal from anemia,” says Villunger. The pressure to reproduce many blood cells quickly
puts stress on stem cells and may result in mutations that could lead to cancer the next time
stem cells have to work that hard.
Stem cells in mice lacking Puma are spared from the heavy work load, because mature cells
survive the radiation onslaught. When Strasser’s group killed off mature blood cells in
the mice lacking Puma with drugs called glucocorticoids, the mice got lymphoma, indicating that
it’s the initial apoptosis-induced die-off of mature cells and subsequent overworking and
overstressing of stem cells that causes the cancer.
The results may help explain why children cured of leukemia often develop other types of cancer
20 or 30 years later, Villunger says. About 15 percent of new cancer cases are new types of
tumors arising in cancer survivors, he says. That suggests that the tumors could be related to
aggressive treatment of the first cancer, and could mean that doctors should reevaluate how hard
they should hit tumors with chemotherapy drugs or radiation.
Of course, “how to deal with this in real life with the patient next to you is
complicated,” Villunger says.
Aug. 2, 2010 (U.S. News & World Report)