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Key molecule suppresses growth of cancerous liver tumours

15 Feb 2013
Key molecule suppresses growth of cancerous liver tumours

A molecule already implicated in a number of diverse cellular functions can suppress the growth of tumours in the liver, a Mayo Clinic Cancer Center study has found. Its name is IQGAP1, and when the molecule is active in the cells that surround a tumour cell, this “tumour microenvironment” becomes less hospitable to cancer growth.

 
When the molecule is deficient, cancer thrives.
 

Results of the study appear in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.
 

The findings give new insight into cancer metastasis, the ability of a tumour to spread from its primary site to distant organs such as the brain, lung or liver.
 

The results also point to new targets for preventing or treating liver metastases, the major cause of death from cancer.
 

“Tumour cells are intelligent -- they talk to the cells in their surroundings to change the way they behave and make the environment supportive of cancer growth. If we can disrupt the communication between the tumour cells and the tumour microenvironment, we can prevent tumour growth or metastasis in the liver,” says senior study author Ningling Kang, Ph.D., a biochemist and molecular biologist at Mayo Clinic.

 
For certain solid tumours, about 70 to 90 percent of the tumour mass is made up of microenvironment -- a complex mix of noncancerous cells, secreted extracellular matrix proteins, and tumour-promoting signaling molecules. This tumour microenvironment supports tumour growth and drug resistance. Mechanisms regulating the tumour microenvironment are not well understood.

 
IQGAP1 controls the shape and movement of cells. To study the effects of this molecule on liver metastases, Dr. Kang and her colleagues implanted tumour cells into the livers of mice genetically engineered to lack the molecule.
 

The implanted tumour cells still had the molecule, but the cells that made up the tumour microenvironment did not. When researchers compared the progression of cancer between mutant and normal mice, they found that mice without the molecule developed more liver metastases.

 
They also followed up these studies in mice by comparing samples of normal and cancerous liver tissues of colorectal cancer patients. They discovered that the levels of IQGAP1 were reduced in the tumor microenvironment of liver metastases than in the normal tissue, suggesting that the tumour somehow communicates with its surroundings to tamp down the activity of this critical molecule.
 

This communication went both ways. Through a number of basic functional experiments, Dr. Kang and her colleagues showed that IQGAP1 interacts with and suppresses a powerful signaling molecule called TGF-beta receptor that tells normal cells that surround a tumor cell to become tumour-promoting cells.
 

“We think that tumour cells come into the liver and give orders to the signaling molecules in the surrounding normal cells to reduce the amount of IQGAP1, thereby creating a good tumour microenvironment for themselves,” Dr. Kang says. “If we can understand exactly how they do this, then we may be able to uncover new therapeutic targets for liver metastasis.”

 
Co-authors of the article are Chunsheng Liu, Daniel D. Billadeau, Ph.D., Haitham Abdelhakim, Edward Leof, Ph.D., Liu Yang, M.B.B.S., Lisa Boardman, M.D., and Vijay H. Shah, M.D., all of Mayo Clinic; Kozo Kaibuchi, M.D., Ph.D., of Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine in Nagoya, Japan; Carmelo Bernabeu, Ph.D., of Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red de Enfermedades Raras in Madrid; and George S. Bloom, Ph.D., of the University of Virginia.

 
Source: Mayo Clinic