|
Pancreatic cancer linked to developmental
cell signaling pathway
Finding suggests possible treatment
approach for highly lethal disease
BOSTON - September 14, 2003 - Scientists at Massachusetts
General Hospital (MGH) and the University of California at San Francisco
(UCSF) have found strong evidence that a cell signaling pathway
active in embryonic development plays a crucial role in pancreatic
cancer. The finding provides the first model of the development
and growth of pancreatic cancer and suggests a clear route for treatment
of this lethal malignancy. The research is being posted online today
by the journal Nature, prior to publication in the print
journal.
Pancreatic cancer is the fourth leading cause of cancer deaths
in the U.S. Each year 30,000 cases are diagnosed, and for the majority
of patients the disease is incurable.
Using human cell lines, the researchers showed that pancreatic cancer
growth can be arrested by chemically blocking a signaling pathway
which previously had been known to be active in human embryonic
development. Known as the Hedgehog pathway, this cascade of chemical
steps allows proteins to pass along a signal that ultimately leads
to changes in gene activity and has already been linked to several
other types of cancer. The research highlights the link between
embryonic development and cancer - proteins that normally regulate
rapid growth in the embryo may often be responsible for the out-of-control
cell divisions in cancer, the scientists say.
"Surgery has represented the only possible cure for pancreatic
cancer patients," said Sarah P. Thayer, M.D., Ph.D., of MGH,
the paper's co-first and the co-senior author with Matthias Hebrok,
Ph.D., of UCSF. "However, the majority of patients are diagnosed
at an incurable stage of their disease. We have been stymied by
our inability to diagnose patients earlier and offer effective treatments."
Thayer deals principally with the surgical management of pancreatic
cancer patients, and the disease is the main focus of her research.
Although much more work needs to be done before definitive conclusions
can be made regarding the application of this research to clinical
practice, Hebrok, assistant professor of medicine in UCSF's Diabetes
Center, comments, "Identifying the role of this pathway in
pancreatic cancer offers hope for developing treatments, and it
also underscores how studying organ development in embryos can provide
clues to cancer, diabetes and other serious diseases."
"Our funding of this research emphasizes the importance of
understanding the signals and genetic networks that regulate development
of the pancreatic cells," said Richard Insel, MD, vice president,
Research, Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF) International,
one of the supporters of the study. "These insights could prove
relevant for activating beta cell regeneration, and for understanding
how beta cell growth is disordered in pancreatic malignancies.
Normally, Hedgehog proteins influence early development by binding
to another protein on the cell surface, known as the Patched receptor.
This union triggers a series of chemical changes, leading to gene
activity in the nucleus. Mutations in the Hedgehog pathway are known
to cause several types of cancer, and this research adds pancreatic
cancer to the list of serious outcomes of aberrant Hedgehog activity.
In one part of the study, the scientists compared normal adult human
pancreatic tissue to specimens from patients with pancreatic cancer.
No Hedgehog protein was detected in the normal tissue, but it was
found in 70 percent of precancerous and cancerous specimens. Furthermore,
key genes in the Hedgehog pathway were also found to be overexpressed.
"Misexpression of the Hedgehog pathway in transgenic mice resulted
in the formation of abnormal pancreatic cells that resembled human
precursor lesions, suggesting that this pathway may have a role
in the initiation of this cancer," said Thayer, an instructor
in Surgery at Harvard Medical School (HMS). "However, its true
role in pancreatic cancer remains to be determined."
The researchers also examined 26 human pancreatic cancer cell lines
and found Hedgehog activity in all of them. When the Hedgehog pathway
was blocked experimentally, the cancer was killed half of the time.
Cancer-causing mutations "downstream" from the Hedgehog
pathway may cause the other half of the cancers, the researchers
think. The scientists then transplanted pancreatic cancer cells
into mice, creating tumors. They injected the mice with an inhibitor
of the Hedgehog pathway, which resulted in a 50 to 60 percent reduction
in tumor size after seven days.
The experimental results - death of tumor cells both in the Petri
dish and in animals - suggest that this may one day hold promise
as a treatment avenue, the researchers say. Unfortunately, the inhibitor
used for these experiments is not a practical drug for clinical
use, they point out. But since abnormalities in Hedgehog expression
have already been linked to gliomas, basal cell carcinoma and very
recently, small cell lung cancer, university and commercial labs
are screening for more effective Hedgehog blockers. "If Hedgehog
is involved in pancreatic cancer, these other blockers might offer
a bright prospect in treating a disease that has eluded effective
treatment up to now," Hebrok said.
A second paper in the same issue of Nature reports that Hedgehog
signaling is active in pancreatic and other cancers along the gastrointestinal
tract. These results provide further evidence that deregulation
of this pathway is a more general phenomenon than previously anticipated.
Marina Pasca di Magliano, Ph.D., of the UCSF Diabetes Center, is
co-first author on the paper. Other UCSF co-authors are Patrick
W. Heiser, Yan Ping Qi, Stephan Grysin, Ph.D., and Martin McMahon,
Ph.D. Co-authors at MGH and HMS are Drucilla Roberts M.D., Gregory
Lauwers, M.D., Corinne Nielsen, M.S., Carlos Fernández-del
Castillo, M.D., Bozena Antoniu, M.S., Vijay Yajnik, M.D., Ph.D,
and Andrew Warshaw, M.D. In addition to the JDRF funding, the research
was supported by grants from the Lustgarten Foundation for Pancreatic
Cancer Research and the National Institutes of Health.
Massachusetts General Hospital, established in 1811, is the original
and largest teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School. The MGH
conducts the largest hospital-based research program in the United
States, with an annual research budget of more than $350 million
and major research centers in AIDS, cardiovascular research, cancer,
cutaneous biology, neurodegenerative disorders, transplantation
biology and photomedicine. In 1994, the MGH joined with Brigham
and Women's Hospital to form Partners HealthCare System, an integrated
health care delivery system comprising the two academic medical
centers, specialty and community hospitals, a network of physician
groups and nonacute and home health services.
Media Contact: Sue
McGreevey, MGH Public Affairs
Physician Referral Service: 1-800-388-4644
Information about Clinical Trials
|
|
 |