Protein that helps cancer cells to survive stress
Reported November 12, 2010
Scientists have made a novel discovery that could lead to the
development of more effective treatments for a number of diseases.
Researchers at NUI Galway have shown that a protein produced when cells are
stressed interacts with a stress sensor allowing cells to survive conditions of
intense stress.
Understanding this interaction may help scientists interfere with cancer cells
so the cells can no longer survive exposure to stressful conditions.
Healthy cells are not usually under stress, but unhealthy cells, such as cancer
cells, are often under considerable stress because they grow rapidly in places
where they are not supposed to grow.
When a cell is under these stressful conditions, the stress protein Hsp70 is
activated to help the cell.
Professor Afshin Samali, lead author of the study and head of the Department of
Biochemistry at NUI Galway, and his team have discovered that under cell stress
conditions Hsp70 interacts with a receptor in the cell, activating survival
mechanisms and preventing apoptosis, the normal cell death mechanism.
By understanding more about Hsp70 and the way it functions, scientists can learn
how to block its function, allowing unhealthy cells to succumb to stress and
die.
This could have significant implications in the development of new cancer drugs,
which would block the protein to encourage tumor cell death.
In contrast to diseases where cell death is abundant such as Alzheimer’s,
Parkinson’s Disease, and Diabetes, increasing the levels of Hsp70 could
potentially be used to help these cells survive stressful conditions.
"Our results have identified a novel protein-protein interaction that helps
cancer cells to survive stressful growth conditions. By interfering with this
interaction we hope to develop a new class of anticancer drugs. This work was
funded by Science Foundation Ireland and will have a significant impact on
cancer research and drug design," Samali stated.
The findings are published in the online, open access journal PLoS Biology.
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