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Study targets SGEF protein in treating glioblastoma brain tumours

14 Jan 2016
Study targets SGEF protein in treating glioblastoma brain tumours

The Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen) has identified a protein called SGEF that promotes the survival of glioblastoma tumour cells and helps the cancer invade brain tissue.

TGen researchers identified SGEF as a target for new brain cancer therapies in a study published by Molecular Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, the world's largest professional organisation dedicated to advancing cancer research.

Glioblastoma multiforme, or GBM, is the most common primary tumour of the brain and central nervous system.

One of the primary treatments for glioblastoma is surgical removal of the tumour.

However, because of the aggressive way glioblastomas invade surrounding brain tissue, it is impossible to remove all parts of the tumours, and the cancer eventually returns and spreads.

This study found that SGEF also plays a role in how glioblastoma tumours develop resistance to treatment.

Following surgery, GBM is treated with radiation and the standard-of-care chemotherapy drug called temozolomide (TMZ),

"We need to identify the genetic and cellular-pathway signalling mechanisms that make brain tumours resistant to treatment," said Dr. Nhan Tran, Associate Professor and head of TGen's Central Nervous System Tumor Research Lab.

"And the role of SGEF in promoting chemotherapeutic resistance highlights this previously unappreciated protein. Importantly, this also suggests that SGEF could be a new candidate for development of targeted therapeutics," said Dr. Tran, the study's senior author.

This study was funded, in part, by The Ben & Catherine Ivy Foundation.

"Contributing to the progress, TGen studies are helping uncover the mysteries behind glioblastoma," said Catherine (Bracken) Ivy, founder and president of the Arizona-based Ben & Catherine Ivy Foundation.

"This research is fundamental to helping patients survive longer and critical to our goal of improving treatments, and eventually finding a cure."

The ability of cancer cells to survive is influenced by the proteins that regulate cellular pathways involved in promoting how cells grow, replicate and spread, as well as whether cells will die when exposed to anti-cancer drugs.

Radiation and drug treatment of GBM can lead to DNA damage.

This study shows that SGEF promotes cancer cell survival in response to TMZ treatment by allowing tumour cells to rapidly repair the damaged DNA that otherwise would lead to cell death.

"Our study shows that SGEF may have an important role in helping cells survive injury -- known as the pro-survival cellular signalling response -- including injury to common drugs used to treat brain cancer such as TMZ," said Dr. Shannon Fortin Ensign, the study's lead author.

"The roles of invasion and survival are interconnected in the promotion of disease progression," said Dr. Fortin Ensign, a former researcher at TGen who now is a resident in Internal Medicine at Scripps Green Hospital in La Jolla, Calif.

"SGEF presents a novel hub in the interrelated axes of tumour cell invasion and survival."

The study, SGEF is Regulated via TWEAK/Fn14/NF-κB Signaling and Promotes Survival by Modulation of the DNA Repair Response to Temozolomide, was published online by AACR's Molecular Cancer Research.

SourceThe Translational Genomics Research Institute