Liver cancer which is the third-leading cause of cancer death worldwide can now be prevented using a novel therapeutic approach.

"In this study we are describing for the first time a micro-RNA that is able to prevent and treat liver cancer," said Dimitrios Iliopoulos, of Dana-Farber's Department of Cancer Immunology and AIDS. The findings are being published today in the journal Cell.
The authors said they plan to start a phase I clinical trial using miR-124 in liver cancer patients in 2012.
Iliopoulos and his colleagues found that in mice given a carcinogenic chemical, DEN, liver cancer is initiated by the activation of a molecular circuit that sets up an inflammatory state in the cells, leading to cancer. Once this inflammatory circuit is turned on even for a few days, it becomes permanent, sustaining its activity through a never-ending feedback loop – a "snowball effect," as Iliopoulos termed it.
Iliopoulos previously identified a similar feedback circuit implicated in the development of breast cancer.
One element of the circuit is a micro-RNA called miR-124, the Dana-Farber team reported.
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HFN4α is an essential factor in formation of liver cells and their proper function. When HNF4α is suppressed, said Iliopoulos, it creates a temporary state of inflammation in the cell – a forerunner of cancer. "After only a few days, this transient inflammatory response is converted into a chronic inflammatory response by this feedback circuit that is continuously amplified," he said.
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To test this notion they administered systemically miR-124 once a week for four weeks to mice that had developed liver cancer by exposure to DEN. "We found that miR-124 suppressed more than 80 per cent of tumor growth and size" by causing the cancer cells to self-destruct, the scientists wrote. They observed no toxic effects in other essential organs, such as the kidneys, spleen, heart and lungs.
Further, they showed that giving miR-124 to mice exposed to DEN actually prevented the development of liver tumors.
"Our hope is that miR-124 potentially could be used as a preventive in patients at high risk of liver cancer because they have chronic hepatitis C or as a therapeutic agent in patients with liver cancer" said Iliopoulos.
Source-Eurekalert