Cancer and Diabetes: A Shared Biological Basis?
Reported October 3, 2011
(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- What do you know; two culprits turn out to be related!
Cancer and diabetes appear to have some biology in common. A pathway that
initially drew attention for its role in embryonic stem cells and cancer also
influences the odds that mice develop or resist diabetes.
According to a new study, mice with high levels of the cancer-promoting proteins
become more sensitive to insulin and less prone to diabetes when on a high-fat
diet.
"This highlights the overlap in the biology of these disorders," George Daley of
Harvard Medical School was quoted as saying. "It may be the same kinds of
metabolic shifts that allow cancer cells to grow are also related to
[whole-body] glucose metabolism."
According to Daley, there were clues about the connection, but no obvious
mechanism. For example, studies have shown that cancer cells within a tumor are
able to grow more rapidly by shifting the way they use glucose. Genome-wide
association studies for type 2 diabetes have also pinpointed several
susceptibility genes with known links to cancer or the cell cycle.
Daley's team, including first authors Hau Zhu and Ng Shyh-Chang, had noticed
earlier that an immature form of the microRNA , tiny bits of RNA that silence
genes by targeting messenger RNA, known as let-7 is abundant in stem cells.
"It allows stem cells to be stem cells," Zhu was quoted as saying.
Let-7 is also important in preventing cancer, Zhu explained, and its activity is
blocked by the cancer-promoting RNA-binding protein Lin28. Lin28 is also known
as an ingredient that can help turn skin cells into embryonic stem cell-like
cells.
"Mice with too much Lin28 grow really large," Zhu was quoted as saying based on
their earlier work.
"They are giant mice and they soak up glucose really efficiently."
The new study shows that Lin28 transgenic mice are also resistant to diabetes
and obesity. That resistance holds even as the mice grow older, Shyh-Chang was
quoted as saying.
Mice lacking Lin28a or that have increases in let-7 become insulin resistant and
have impaired glucose tolerance. These metabolic changes occurred in part
through effects linked to the insulin-PI3K-mTOR pathway, which is important in
cancer and basic metabolism.
Importantly, the researchers also found that let-7 acts on many genes with
apparent links to type2 diabetes and glucose control in humans. This may prove
to be good news for those in search of new ways to tackle complex conditions
like diabetes, which have many genetic drivers, each with relatively small
effects.
"MicroRNAs touch multiple targets in subtle ways; our findings suggest that
let-7 and perhaps other microRNAs may help to unify the picture of how type 2
diabetes develops," Shyh-Chang was quoted as saying.
SOURCE: Cell
|