Potential New
Oncogene
May Be Missing Link in Cancer-Causing Chain
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
High levels of a protein called LRP6 can make cancer cells
more aggressive, according to
"Because no one has ever connected LRP6 to proliferation in tumors, we believe we may have identified a new oncogene," says Guojun Bu, Ph.D., associate professor of pediatrics and of cell biology and physiology. The findings were published in the journal Oncogene.
"In several types of human cancer, such as breast and colon cancer, a key cell signaling pathway that regulates cell growth and development is overactive because a gene coding for a pathway component has mutated," Bu says.
Increased signal activity from this pathway can lead to abnormal cell proliferation and ultimately to cancer, but researchers have been unable to identify the pathway component responsible for certain types of cancer such as breast cancer. "We believe LRP6 may be the missing link, the long-sought component that turns up the activity of this signaling pathway," Bu says.
To uncover LRP6's role in cancer, Bu's team took slow-growing cancer cells and altered the LRP6 gene so that it made more of the protein. They found that the cancer cells began proliferating more rapidly as a result. When the researchers introduced these aggressive cells into mice, the animals developed tumors twice as large as those caused by the original, slow-growing cancer cells.
Having seen the effect of high-levels of LRP6 in laboratory
experiments, Bu and his team looked for higher-than-normal LRP6 gene activity
in human tumor samples. "We used patient-matched tumor specimens from the
"The most interesting was breast cancer," he says. "We found the LRP6 gene had higher than normal activity in five of the eight breast tumors we tested. So, it appears that an increase of LRP6 alone may lead to breast cancer in these cases."
Next Bu and his colleagues plan to screen a larger group of
breast cancer samples to see how frequently the LRP6 gene is
overactivated
in tumor tissue. Because LRP6 is an essential component of a key signaling
pathway and located in an exposed position on the surface of cells, Bu believes
the protein may be a good target for drugs that decrease its function to slow
down or prevent the progression of some types of cancer.
SOURCES:
Oncogene,
Washington University School of Medicine
(‘http://www.wustl.edu)