Protein
Linked to Growth of Organs and Cancer
Behind the Cancer
Headlines®
Johns Hopkins
scientists have identified a protein in fruit flies whose counterpart product
in humans may help cause cancer.
The researchers report
in the journal Cell that a protein
dubbed Yorkie directly controls the fruit fly’s organ size
and, when overabundant, causes increased cell growth and decreased cell death,
hallmarks of cancer. Yorkie's relative in mammals, called
“Over the past few
decades, science has identified a few so-called oncogenes,
whose protein products act as accelerators and trigger abnormal cell growth,”
said Duojia Pan, Ph.D., who carried out most of the
study at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center at
The researchers also
report Yorkie directly regulates the size of all the
fruit fly’s organs. “We were surprised to find that by adding Yorkie to levels above normal, the fruit fly’s organs grew
larger,” said Pan. “Likewise, by removing Yorkie to levels below normal, the fruit fly’s organs
were smaller than usual.”
The new findings build
on Pan’s earlier studies, which showed that fruit flies missing a gene called
hippo developed tumors. That study revealed a tumor-suppression pathway
involving proteins made by hippo and two other like-minded genes, all three of
which function in a chain reaction to chemically add phosphate to other
proteins, a process called phosphorylation.
“From those results,
we predicted that another protein must be involved in the tumor-suppression
pathway that is a target of the phosphorylation
cascade,” said Pan.
Yorkie turns out to be that “mystery protein,” the
researchers report. In their experiments, Pan and his colleagues show that the
hippo phosphorylation cascade, by adding a phosphate
group to the Yorkie protein, turns it off.
When the scientists engineered reduced levels of hippo and other
proteins that keep Yorkie in check, Yorkie
caused tissues to overgrow by prompting more cells to grow and fewer to die,
the hallmarks of cancer.
Further experiments in
the fruit fly that replaced Yorkie with
Pan is now trying to
identify the signal that tells genes like hippo to turn on or off once an organ
grows to the appropriate size. That signal could be harnessed for therapeutics
against cancer.
SOURCES:
Cell,
Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions (http://www.jhmi.edu)