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Processes Leading to Leukemia
updated: Jan 26, 2012, 2:21 PM
Source: UCSB
UCSB Researchers Discover the Processes Leading to Acute Myeloid Leukemia
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) -- Researchers at UC Santa Barbara have discovered a
molecular pathway that may explain how a particularly deadly form of cancer
develops. The discovery may lead to new cancer therapies that reprogram cells
instead of killing them. The findings are published in a recent paper in the
Journal of Biological Chemistry.
The UCSB research team described how a certain mutation in DNA disrupts cellular
function in patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). The researchers were
prompted to study this process by another research team's discovery that AML
patients have a mutation in a certain enzyme, which was reported in the New
England Journal of Medicine. The enzyme is a protein called DNMT3A, which leads
to changes in how the DNA of AML patients is methylated, or "tagged." Norbert
Reich, professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at UCSB, was
already studying that particular enzyme with his research group, so they began
to study the disease process of AML at the cellular level.
Reich explained that tagging is a way of reading DNA at the cellular level. This
falls within an area of study called epigenetics, a process that occurs "on top"
of genetics. Each person has approximately 200 types of cells, all with the same
DNA, and these must be controlled in different ways. "There is an enzyme -- a
protein -- that tags DNA and controls which of the genes in your cells, your
DNA, gets turned on and off," said Reich. "So you have 20,000 genes, and you
have to control them differently in your brain than in your liver."
Reich explained that there is current interest in this broader field of
epigenetics as a direction for the treatment of cancer. "There's definitely the
idea that this may be a new way of developing therapeutics, because you don't
have to kill the cancer cell," said Reich. "Almost every cancer therapy that's
out there works on the principle that a cancer cell needs to be killed."
With epigenetics, instead of only having DNA sequence coding for certain genes,
there is an epigenetic process, with another layer of information on top of the
genetic process. In this case, that information is the tagging by the methyl
groups.
"If you really think about it, this is part of the answer as to how your cells
can be so different and yet they all have the same DNA," said Reich. "You have
the same genome in every one of your cells, but you do not have the same
epigenome, which is basically the methylation pattern, the tagging pattern. That
is different in every type of your cells. And the way this relates back to
cancer, with leukemia, in those patients, the tagging is messed up. The patterns
are not correct. Our big contribution to that is we've explained how the
mutations in the enzyme could lead to that disruption of the tagging pattern."
The UCSB group developed a test to demonstrate that the mutant enzymes in AML
can only work on DNA for short distances. As a result, the precise methylation
patterns of a healthy cell are disturbed, resulting in genes being turned on at
the wrong place and time, which in turn can initiate the growth of cancerous
cells.
The team found that the mutation AML patients have causes a certain complex of
four proteins to be disrupted. "The surprise was that the disruption doesn't
stop the enzyme from being active; it doesn't stop the enzyme from tagging the
DNA," said Reich. "Instead, it stops the way it can do it. Instead of going to
your DNA and tagging an entire region of chromosome, it goes there, does one
thing, and leaves. That process, that change, is what we see in the AML
patients. So we think we have a molecular explanation for this disease."
Reich said that the currently prescribed drug Vidaza works by affecting the same
enzyme that is mutated in AML. There is interest in the pharmaceutical industry
in developing other therapeutics to target the enzymes responsible for tagging
the DNA. These epigenetic inhibitors would reprogram rather than kill the cell.
Traditional cancer therapies use radiation and chemotherapy to remove or kill
cancer cells. "The problem with that is that cancer cells are often very subtly
different from normal cells," said Reich. "So you have one of the most difficult
therapeutic challenges known to man, which is to distinguish between two human
cells -- one that's cancerous and one that's not. Instead of killing the cell,
the notion is that if you could just reprogram the cell, then it goes back to
being normal. You intercept the cancer development. This is still an aspiration;
it hasn't been achieved really, but that's what attracts people to the field of
epigenetic-based therapies, because of the prospect of not having to kill
cells."
Celeste Holz-Schietinger and Douglas Matje, both graduate students working in
the Reich lab, are the first and second authors of the paper.
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COMMENT 252128
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2012-01-27 12:50 PM |
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I love reading about the wonderful successes occurring right here at UCSB. I do wonder why don't I hear the applause in the form of postings??~!!
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