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New Way to Attack a Process That Tumor Cells Use to Escape Standard Cancer Drugs

by Dr. Trupti Shirole on Apr 20 2016 5:32 AM

 New Way to Attack a Process That Tumor Cells Use to Escape Standard Cancer Drugs
Cancer drugs are no longer limited to toxic chemicals that can cause significant side effects. Many are specially designed targeted therapies that seek out and destroy cancer cells while sparing normal cells in the body. Currently, patients often receive a combination of these two approaches to ensure the best chance of treatment success.
Cancer cells often devise ways to survive even in the presence of toxic chemotherapy. Now, a research team led by investigators at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) has found a way to attack a process that tumor cells use to escape the effects of standard cancer drugs. The discovery is published online in the journal Nature Cell Biology.

Many targeted therapies in development act on the PI3K/AKT pathway, one of the most frequently aberrantly activated signaling pathways in human cancer cells. The pathway is involved in both tumor development and progression. In their new research, BIDMC's Alex Toker, Harvard Medical School (HMS) student Evan Lien and colleagues found that in breast cancer cells, abnormal signaling through the PI3K/AKT pathway drives the production of glutathione, a major cellular antioxidant.

This adaptation can allow cancer cells to survive even in the face of toxic chemotherapy. Therefore, the investigators decided to test the effectiveness of standard chemotherapy in combination with a drug that blocks glutathione production. This combination caused significant regression of breast cancer with PI3K/AKT pathway mutations, both in laboratory dishes and in mice.

"Our work has uncovered a vulnerability in human breast cancer that is used by tumor cells to escape the lethal effects of conventional chemotherapy and that leads to resistance to such therapies," explained Toker, Chief of the Division of Signal Transduction in the Departments of Medicine and Pathology and the Cancer Center at BIDMC. "By targeting this vulnerability with specific drug combinations, the hope is that efficient therapeutic responses will be observed and with reduced toxicity."

Pier Paolo Pandolfi, Director of the Cancer Center at BIDMC and George C. Reisman Professor of Medicine at HMS, added, "These findings are important as they further highlight how targeting the specific metabolic requirements of cancer cells can prove effective in their selective eradication."

Source-Eurekalert


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