Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

[FWD: Interesting article from JHU - Jack]

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

An interesting press release from JHU from Jack. Note at the end of the

article how important all sources of funding are. If you have not

called your legislator about supporting cancer research funding at NCI

you can still do it. They have not finalized appropriations figures

yet.

Kathy

> s Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center

> Office of Public Affairs

> Media contact: Wasta

> ; wastava@...

> November 8, 2006

>

> FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

>

> 'MUSCLE' PROTEIN DRIVES PROSTATE CANCER

>

> Researchers at the s Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center have for the first

> time implicated the muscle protein myosin VI in the development of

> prostate cancer and its spread.

>

> In a series of lab studies with human prostate cancer cells, the s

> Hopkins scientists were surprised to find overproduction of myosin VI in

> both prostate tumor cells and precancerous lesions. When the scientists

> genetically altered the cells to " silence " myosin VI, they discovered the

> cells were less able to invade in a test tube.

>

> " Our results suggest that myosin VI may be critical in starting and

> maintaining the malignant properties of the majority of human prostate

> cancers diagnosed today, " says Angelo M. De Marzo, M.D., Ph.D., a study

> coauthor and associate professor of pathology, urology and oncology.

>

> The s Hopkins work, published in the November issue of the American

> Journal of Pathology, has potential value for better ways to diagnose the

> disease, treat and track the effects of drugs and surgery. " Targeting

> myosin VI represents a promising new approach that could lead eventually

> new approaches to treating the disease, " says Jun Luo, Ph.D., senior

> author of the paper and assistant professor of urology.

>

> Myosins are a class of 40 motor proteins that power cell movement and

> muscle contractions. Normally, as they work, myosins slide in a single

> direction along the threads of a protein called actin. But myosin VI

> moves against the grain, and it does not function as a classical " muscle "

> protein.

>

> Using a DNA microarray to study all of the genes in 59 samples of benign

> or cancerous prostate tissue from patients at s Hopkins, the

> researchers found the malignant samples showed a 3.7-fold higher

> expression of myosin VI as compared to normal samples, and a 4.6-fold

> increase as compared to the samples from patients with enlarged prostate.

>

> Next, the researchers hunted for myosin VI in 240 prostate tissue

> samples, discovering overproduction early in the development of prostate

> cancer in such pre-tumor conditions as high-grade prostatic

> intraepithelial neoplasia (PIN) and proliferative inflammatory atrophy.

>

> Finally, when they altered some cancerous cells by knocking down their

> myosin VI protein, the cancer cells not only were less able to spread

> around, but also showed 10 times the amount of a tumor suppressor called

> thioredoxin-interacting protein (TXNIP).

>

> Prostate cancer, which affects one in nine American men over the course

> of their lives, is mainly diagnosed by needle biopsy of the prostate

> gland after a blood test shows an increased level of prostate-specific

> antigen (PSA). While the PSA test is now widespread and provides many men

> with early diagnosis and better chance of a cure, says Luo, it may not be

> sensitive or specific enough to pinpoint the existence of cancer. Using

> myosin VI or other factors, it may be possible, Luo says, to create a

> laboratory test to identify high or low levels in urine or blood samples,

> and this might aid in the detection of prostate cancer. Myosin VI also has

> been shown to be associated with ovarian cancer.

>

> The study was supported by the U.S. Department of Defense, the National

> Cancer Institute, the and Sturm Foundation and the Prostate

> Cancer Foundation. Coauthors were A. Dunn, Shenglin Chen, Dennis

> A. Faith, L. Hicks, A. Platz, Yidong Chen, M.

> Ewing, Jurga Sauvageot and B. Isaacs.

>

> --JHMI--

>

> On the Web:

> s Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center

> http://www.hopkinskimmelcancercenter.org

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...