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Researchers study radiation resistance in brain cancer cells

15 May 2020
Researchers study radiation resistance in brain cancer cells

In a vertical climb to avoid collision with a towering mountain, a plane ejects cargo to gain altitude.

Investigators at the University of Minnesota showed that cancer cells perform similar feats in escaping the killing effects of radiation.

Their work was published in the journal, EBiomedicine.

Radiation is a key component of the standard-of-care treatment for the deadly brain cancer, glioblastoma; however, the treatment is rarely curative.

While the growth of glioblastoma cells is often stalled by radiation, tumour growth inevitably resumes in nearly all treated patients.

"Understanding how cancer cells acquire resistance to radiation defines a pathway forward for how we can defeat this cancer," noted Clark C. Chen, MD, PhD, Lyle French Chair in Neurosurgery and head of the Department of Neurosurgery at the University of Minnesota Medical School.

To understand how glioblastomas become resistant to radiation, the research team led by Chen collected clinical glioblastoma samples from patients prior to and after radiation treatment and compared the levels of microRNAs.

MicroRNA is a class of small RNA cells that control how much protein a cell makes, which ultimately determines how the cell functions.

"MicroRNA plays such a key role in cell fate that its discovery was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2006," said Beibei Xu, PhD, Department of Neurosurgery, who is first author of the paper.

While levels of most microRNAs remain unchanged in response to radiation treatment,

Chen's team identified a small subset, most notably a microRNA named miR-603, that decreased after radiation.

Using a number of experimental models, the team subsequently showed that glioblastoma cells, like a plane dumping cargo in a vertical ascent, jettison miR-603 in response to radiation treatment.

As a result, glioblastoma cells increase the production of proteins that render them insensitive to radiation.

"The cancer cells package miR-603 into vesicles called exosomes or extracellular vesicles. These vesicles facilitate communication between cells," Xu explained. "We have long appreciated that these vesicles have profound effects on recipient cells. Our study is one of the first to demonstrate that secretion of microRNAs, through these vesicles, influences the behaviour of the secreting cell."

The findings of this study suggest a new therapeutic strategy that may move researchers one step closer to a cure for glioblastoma. "If we introduce a large amount of miR-603 to overwhelm the ability of the cancer cells to export them, we increase the tumour-killing effects of radiation," Chen said. "Such delivery can be achieved through gene therapy or nanoparticle platforms. We are working quickly to develop these agents for use during a clinical trial in the near future."

Source: University of Minnesota Medical School