Health news
Health news top Health news

   Login  |  Register    
Health News Make AMN Your Home PageDiscussion BoardsAdvanced Search ToolMedical RSS/XML News FeedHealth news
  You are here : Health.am > Health Centers > Cancer Health CenterPancreatic Cancer news

Mayo Clinic Researchers Find Oncogene is Important in Pancreatic Cancer Growth and Spread

Pancreatic Cancer newsFeb 23, 2010

Researchers at the Mayo Clinic campus in Florida have found that PKC-iota (PKCi), an oncogene important in colon and lung cancers, is over-produced in pancreatic cancer and is linked to poor patient survival. They also found that genetically inhibiting PKCi in laboratory animals led to a significant decrease in pancreatic tumor growth and spread.

The discovery, reported in the March 1 issue of Cancer Research, is especially encouraging, they say, because an experimental agent that targets PKCi is already being tested in patients at Mayo Clinic.

“This is the first study to establish a role for PKCi in growth of pancreatic cancer, so it is exciting to know that an agent already exists that targets PKCi which we can now try in preclinical studies,” says the study’s senior investigator, Nicole Murray, Ph.D., of the Department of Cancer Biology. 

The drug, aurothiomalate, is being tested in a phase I clinical trial in patients with lung cancer at Mayo Clinic’s sites in Minnesota and Arizona. Based on findings to date, a phase II clinical trial is being planned to combine aurothiomalate with agents targeted at other molecules involved in cancer growth.

Mayo Clinic researchers, led by Alan Fields, Ph.D., chair of the Department of Cancer Biology and a co-author of this report, discovered aurothiomalate in 2006 by screening thousands of Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs for their ability to inhibit PKCi signaling. The drug was once used to treat rheumatoid arthritis.

Dr. Murray stressed that this new study has not tested aurothiomalate against pancreatic cancer yet, but any treatment that targets this major cancer pathway offers a new avenue for therapy. “This is such a deadly disease. No standard treatment has shown much promise,” she says. “New ideas and fresh, targeted therapies such as this are sorely needed.”

Mayo researchers have led the field in understanding the role of the protein kinase C (PKC) family of enzymes as major players in cancer development and progression. Dr. Fields was the first to discover that PKCi is a human oncogene — an abnormal gene that cancer cells use to grow and/or survive. He found that PKCi is genetically altered and over-expressed in a majority of lung cancers, and that over-expression of the gene in tumors predicts poor patient survival. That led to his search for aurothiomalate and the current testing in patients.

Dr. Murray says she has also found that different members of the PKC family play distinct roles in colon cancer, which offers more opportunity for targeted treatment. In fact, animal studies show that use of a different drug, enzastaurin, significantly reduced the initial development of colon tumors, according to Dr. Murray. Enzastaurin targets PKC-beta (PKCb), which the Mayo team has shown is necessary for initiation of colon cancer, she says.

In the present study, the researchers looked at expression of PKCi in pancreatic cancer because tumor studies show that a different gene, KRAS, is mutated up to 90 percent of the time, and KRAS regulates PKCi. “KRAS has been very difficult to target therapeutically, which is why we are looking at molecules, such as PKCi, that convey signals downstream of KRAS that can be manipulated,” Dr. Murray says.

They found that PKCi is highly expressed in most human pancreatic tumors they sampled, and that high PKCi expression predicts poor patient survival. Studying patient tumors, they found that patients whose tumors exhibited high PKCi expression had a median survival time of 492 days, compared to 681 days for low PKCi expression, and a reduced five-year survival rate (10 percent versus 29.5 percent for low PKCi expression).

The researchers then genetically manipulated the expression of PKCi in pancreatic cancer cells. The results showed that PKCi is required for the growth of pancreatic cancer in both cell-based and animal models. “This is the first demonstration that pancreatic tumors require PKCi to grow and metastasize,” Dr. Murray says.

The data suggest that aurothiomalate, which targets PKCi, may be effective against pancreatic cancer either alone or in combination with other treatments, such as conventional chemotherapy. “Aurothiomalate may inhibit pancreatic cancer alone, or it may sensitize pancreatic tumors to chemotherapy,” she says. “It is possible that a number of cancer growth pathways will need to be targeted for an effective therapy.”

The study was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Mayo Clinic Foundation. The study’s authors, which include investigators from Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., declare no conflicts of interest.

###
About Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic is the first and largest integrated, not-for-profit group practice in the world. Doctors from every medical specialty work together to care for patients, joined by common systems and a philosophy of “the needs of the patient come first.” More than 3,700 physicians, scientists and researchers, and 50,100 allied health staff work at Mayo Clinic, which has campuses in Rochester, Minn; Jacksonville, Fla; and Scottsdale/Phoenix, Ariz.; and community-based providers in more than 70 locations in southern Minnesota., western Wisconsin and northeast Iowa. These locations treat more than half a million people each year. To obtain the latest news releases from Mayo Clinic, go to http://www.mayoclinic.org/news. For information about research and education, visit http://www.mayo.edu. MayoClinic.com (http://www.mayoclinic.com) is available as a resource for your health stories.

Paul Scotti
904-953-2299 (days)
904-953-2000(evenings)

Provided by ArmMed Media

Email this to a friend Bookmark this! Printable Version

RELATED STORIES:


 Comments [ + Post Your Own

Now you're in the public comment zone. What follows is not Armenian Medical Network's stuff; it comes from other people and we don't vouch for it. A reminder: By using this Web site you agree to accept our Terms of Service. Click here to read the Rules of Engagement.

There are no comments for this entry yet. [ + Comment here + ]




We are pleased to let readers post comments about an article. Please increase the credibility of your post by including your full name and email.

All comments are reviewed by our editors before they are posted on the site. Just keep it clean, kids.

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please enter the word you see in the image below:


   [advanced search]   
Interactive Quiz:
1. An infant who sits with only minimal support, attempts to attain a toy beyond reach, and rolls over from the supine to the prone position, but does not have a pincer grasp, is at a developmental level of
2 months
4 months
6 months
9 months
1 year



Health Centers

  Head and Neck Cancer

  Esophageal Cancer

  Benign Esophageal Tumors

  Cancer of the larynx

  Salivary Gland Tumors

  Cancer of the Hypopharynx

  Cancer of the Oropharynx

  Cancer of the Oral Cavity

  Cancer of the Nasal Cavity

  Head and Neck Cancer
      (- for profesionals -)


  Gynecologic cancers

  Cervical cancer

  Endometrial Cancer

  Fallopian Tube Cancer

  Ovarian Cancer

  Vaginal cancer

  Vulvar Cancer

  Ureteral & Renal Pelvic
  Cancers


  Uterine Cancer

  Gestational Trophoblastic
  Neoplasia


  Bladder cancer

  Breast cancer

  Colorectal Cancer

  Carcinoma of the Anus

  Anal Cancer Management

  Hodgkin's lymphoma

  Kaposi's sarcoma

  Kidney cancer

  Laryngeal cancer

  Liver cancer

  Lung cancer

  Lung cancer non small cell

  Lung cancer - small cell

  Oral cancer

  Osteosarcoma

  Cancer of the Penis

  Prostate cancer

  Skin cancer

  Stomach cancer

  Testicular cancer

» » »

Health Centers





Diabetes









Health news
  


Health Encyclopedia

Diseases & Conditions

Drugs & Medications

Health Tools

Health Tools



   Health newsletter

  





   Medical Links



   RSS/XML News Feed



   Feedback






Add to Google Reader or Homepage
Cancer: Overview, Causes, Risk Factors, Treatment
Add to My AOL




Ovantra: Put the SEX Drive Back into your marriage

hit counter