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© Newswise. |
Two Key Players in Cancer Prevention and How They Work
Newswise — Mayo Clinic researchers have challenged the conventional teaching about a common cancer trait and in doing so, discovered how cells are naturally “cancer proofed.” Their findings appear in today’s early online edition of the Dec. 15 issue of the journal Nature (http://www.nature.com/nature ). The researchers investigated aneuploidy (AN-u-ploy-dee), the state in which a cell has an abnormal number of chromosomes that creates cellular instability, giving rise to tumors. They discovered two key proteins that help prevent aneuploidy, and also found how the proteins work to “cancer proof” a cell: by preventing premature segregation of duplicated chromosomes during (nuclear) cell division. Significance of the Mayo Clinic Research “What we discovered is that there’s an active process of cellular machinery that prevents aneuploidy,” says Mayo cancer researcher Jan van Deursen, Ph.D., who led the research team. “It’s a surveillance mechanism involving the two proteins Rae1-Nup98 that makes sure that in every cell division the proper number of chromosomes occur.” Dr. van Deursen says the findings help set the stage for the development of a new generation of cancer treatments that are more effective and gentler than the current radiation and chemotherapy treatments used. “The reason we are investigating this in the first place is because 95 percent of all human cancers involve aneuploidy,” he says. “When researchers show -- as we have just done -- new mechanisms that prevent aneuploidy, we are helping improve the understanding of the basic science that we hope will lead to new cancer treatments one day.” Background Biology *Aneuploidy plays a role in most cancers by making them unstable so they grow out of control. For years in labs around the world experiments using aneuploidic mice versus normal mice showed that if both groups are exposed to carcinogens, both groups develop tumors. But the aneuploidic mice get significantly more tumors. That prompted the urgent question the Mayo Clinic investigators set out to answer: How does aneuploidy arise? *Until now, standard teaching held that aneuploidy’s mechanism of action was controlled by a single cellular system. The Mayo discovery challenges and revises this by proving a second aneuploidy regulatory system is at work: the Rae1-Nup98 complex. How Mayo Discovered the Importance of Rae1-Nup98 1) premature separation of cell components known as sister chromatids Collaboration and Support
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