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Topic Name: A New era of Cancer
Category: Biomedical
Research persons: George Klein
Location: Stockholm, Sweden
Details
Every year, millions of people are diagnosed with cancer - a remarkably high
number. But what about the flipside of those statistics? That is, two out of
three people never get cancer, and more than half of heavy smokers don’t get
cancer, either. A recent study points out this overlooked fact, and suggests
that researchers might discover something by asking why so many people are
resistant to the often deadly disease.
George Klein, Professor Emeritus at the Microbiology and Tumor Biology Center at
the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, has been teaching and researching
since the mid-1940s. In a recent study called “Toward a genetics of cancer
resistance” published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
Klein highlights evidence of several biological cancer resistance mechanisms
that some individuals have that seem to prevent them from developing cancer.
Perhaps, Klein says, there are cancer-resistant genotypes that “nip cancer in
the bud” and keep most of us healthy.
As Klein explains, the suffering of cancer patients and their families has
inspired most cancer researchers to focus on the genetics of cancer
susceptibility. On the other hand, the genetics of cancer resistance has been
largely unexplored, possibly because it is assumed to be merely the other side
of the susceptibility coin. For example, if cancer is caused by mutations in
genes that control cell division, then it logically seems that cancer resistance
is simply a low occurrence of these mutations.
But, Klein says, maybe there is another alternative to the concept of cancer
resistance. Perhaps most people have various protective mechanisms that
counteract the development of cancer cells and stop the disease from progressing
beyond the earliest stages.
“Cancer resistance must be investigated on its own merits,” Klein told
PhysOrg.com. “It is possible and even likely that evolution has provided our
species with highly efficient cancer resistance mechanisms. These may be the
mechanisms that prevent most circulating, disseminated cancer cells that are
found in the blood of all cancer patients to grow into metastasis, and can also
nip cancerous foci (islands of cells in, for example, the prostate or the
breast) in the bud, so that they do not progress.”
In a previous discussion, Klein and his coauthors identified five kinds of
anticancer mechanisms. The first type is immunological, which applies to
virus-associated cancers. For instance, researchers have compared the antibody
responses of the squirrel monkey and the marmoset when infected with Herpesvirus
saimri, a virus that is endogenous to squirrel monkeys but that the marmoset
never encounters. When exposed to the virus, the marmosets, but not the squirrel
monkeys, develop rapidly growing lymphomas. The researchers found a striking
difference in the timing of each animal’s antibody response. In the
tumor-resistant squirrel monkeys, the antibodies rose to a high level just three
days after the infection, but, for the marmosets, the response took three weeks.
By that time, the marmosets already had a rapidly growing virus-driven lymphoma.
Research has shown that such immunological responses are influenced by genetic
variation.
The second mechanism is genetic, and the most common example is DNA repair
mechanisms. Studies have shown that there are individual variations in the
efficiency of DNA repair, which is highlighted in cases such as the specific DNA
repair deficiency called xeroderma pigmentosum. Individuals with this deficiency
are highly sensitive to ultraviolet light, and even with careful protection they
develop multiple skin carcinomas due to the genetic deficiency.
The third mechanism is epigenetic, which involve changes in gene expression,
rather than changes in the DNA text itself. Studies have shown that when mice
that carry a paternal precancerous mutation inherit a maternal imprinting
defect, normal parental imprinting is impaired, which can increase the
probability of cancerous development. In humans, this same imprinting defect
occurs spontaneously and increases tumor incidence, affecting 10% of humans, and
increasing their risk of intestinal cancer about threefold.
The last two anticancer mechanisms are intracellular and intercellular. As part
of an intracellular defense, a cell can trigger apoptosis, or cell death, if it
detects extensive DNA damage, so that the cell doesn’t reproduce and spread the
damage. But sometimes, apoptosis isn’t triggered when it should be. For example,
individuals who carry the genetically mutated tumor suppressor p53 run an
increased risk of inheriting Li-Fraumeni syndrome, a rare disease in which
patients develop multiple tumors.
Klein predicts that intercellular surveillance by neighboring cells, the fifth
known anticancer mechanism, plays a major role in tumor resistance. Cells that
are in direct physical contact with each other can detect precancerous
conditions in one another, and together act as a microenvironmental control
system to prevent the development and progression of unhealthy cells.
While the first four anticancer mechanisms are known to be influenced by genetic
variation, little research has been performed on possible genetic or
developmental variations in the efficiency of the intercellular anticancer
mechanism. However, Klein mentions a group of largely forgotten experiments from
the 1950s and ‘60s, where scientists crossed mouse strains that had a high
incidence of cancer in a given tissue (due to inbreeding and selection for that
particular type of cancer) with mice from a low incidence strain. In the
experiments where they studied mammary cancer, hybrid females were taken from
this case. Their own mammary glands were removed surgically. One mammary gland
from the high cancer strain parent and one gland from the low cancer strain
parent were then transplanted to two opposite flanks of the hybrids. Dealing
with two inbred strains and their hybrid progeny, there is no problem with graft
rejection, Klein explains.
It turned out that tumor incidence in the normal mammary gland derived from the
high cancer parent was tenfold higher than in the mammary gland from the low
cancer strain. Since both tissues were in the same host, exposed to the same
hormonal and viral influences, it meant that the cancerous propensity of the
high cancer strain and/or the resistance of the low cancer strain was at least
partly inherited at the level of the tissue itself. This genetic difference
could either act at the level of the cancer cells or at the level of their
microenvironment.
Klein urges researchers to investigate this intercellular issue, along with the
genetics of tumor resistance that act in multiple ways. Evolution seems to have
favored some relatively common resistance genes that protect the majority of
humans against cancer development. One day, finding out how nature keeps most of
us cancer-free could help identify and repair specific genetic mechanisms in the
large minority of individuals who do suffer from cancer. However, Klein says
that it’s premature to speculate exactly how understanding genetic resistance
could help people who are susceptible to cancer.
“First, it has to be shown that such protection mechanisms exist and, if so,
what cellular and molecular mechanisms are responsible for them,” he said. “Only
after that is clear, is it reasonable to ask whether this knowledge can be
applied for the practical purpose of, for example, cancer prevention.”
| Tags: |
Cancer - George Klein - Microbiology and Tumor Biology Center - genetics of cancer
resistance - - |
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