March 19, 2007 7:30 PM
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GENERIC: Men Health, Caduceus, Da Vinci, Cancer, Prostate, Urology, Man, Lung (CBS)
(WebMD)
Immune responses inadvertently break down a barrier that lets prostate cancer — and maybe breast cancer — spread throughout the body, a new study suggests.
One of the body's most basic defenses is inflammation. Inflamed tissues redden and swell with fluid. They give off a huge number of chemical signals to attract attention from the rest of the immune system.
Cancers don't always cause inflammation. But inflammation is known to help tumor cells grow. Now researchers at the University of California, San Diego, have figured out one reason why.
Michael Karin, Ph.D., and colleagues suspected that a chemical signal, called IKK-alpha, plays a role in prostate cancer. IKK-alpha signals breast tissue to grow during pregnancy and seems to play a role in breast cancer.
In mouse studies, Karin's team found that IKK-alpha is indeed involved in prostate cancer — but in an unexpected way. The signal, they discovered, turns off a gene that makes a protein called maspin. Maspin keeps tumor cells from spreading through the body, a process called metastasis.
As long as prostate-cancer cells keep making maspin, Karin and colleagues found, the cancer did not spread. But once they stopped making maspin, the tumors spread like wildfire.
A little over a decade ago, Ruth Sager, Ph.D., and colleagues at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute discovered maspin — and found that it prevents the spread of breast cancer.
"This confirms our suspicion there is something common to breast and prostate cancers," Karin tells WebMD. "That is why we believe that what we found for prostate cancer is likely to be relevant also for breast cancer."
Inflammation vs. Maspin
What makes tumor cells stop making maspin and start spreading through the body? Karin's team turned up evidence that when inflammatory immune cells invade tumor cells, they trigger IKK-alpha. And that, in turn, turns off maspin production.
More work is needed, Karin cautions. But all kinds of things — including tumor biopsy — can cause inflammation.
"Anything that promotes inflammation may trigger this process earlier," Karin says. "Injury [or] infection can certainly accelerate this. And biopsy is not a neutral procedure, it is an invasive procedure ... and they do it repetitively to follow the progression of the cancer."
The good news, Karin says, is that the new findings will speed research into new cancer drugs that would mimic maspin and prevent cancer spread.
Karin and colleagues report their findings in the journal Nature.
By Daniel DeNoon
Reviewed by Louise Chang, M.D.
© 2007, WebMD Inc. All rights reserved
One of the body's most basic defenses is inflammation. Inflamed tissues redden and swell with fluid. They give off a huge number of chemical signals to attract attention from the rest of the immune system.
Cancers don't always cause inflammation. But inflammation is known to help tumor cells grow. Now researchers at the University of California, San Diego, have figured out one reason why.
Michael Karin, Ph.D., and colleagues suspected that a chemical signal, called IKK-alpha, plays a role in prostate cancer. IKK-alpha signals breast tissue to grow during pregnancy and seems to play a role in breast cancer.
In mouse studies, Karin's team found that IKK-alpha is indeed involved in prostate cancer — but in an unexpected way. The signal, they discovered, turns off a gene that makes a protein called maspin. Maspin keeps tumor cells from spreading through the body, a process called metastasis.
As long as prostate-cancer cells keep making maspin, Karin and colleagues found, the cancer did not spread. But once they stopped making maspin, the tumors spread like wildfire.
A little over a decade ago, Ruth Sager, Ph.D., and colleagues at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute discovered maspin — and found that it prevents the spread of breast cancer.
"This confirms our suspicion there is something common to breast and prostate cancers," Karin tells WebMD. "That is why we believe that what we found for prostate cancer is likely to be relevant also for breast cancer."
Inflammation vs. Maspin
What makes tumor cells stop making maspin and start spreading through the body? Karin's team turned up evidence that when inflammatory immune cells invade tumor cells, they trigger IKK-alpha. And that, in turn, turns off maspin production.
More work is needed, Karin cautions. But all kinds of things — including tumor biopsy — can cause inflammation.
"Anything that promotes inflammation may trigger this process earlier," Karin says. "Injury [or] infection can certainly accelerate this. And biopsy is not a neutral procedure, it is an invasive procedure ... and they do it repetitively to follow the progression of the cancer."
The good news, Karin says, is that the new findings will speed research into new cancer drugs that would mimic maspin and prevent cancer spread.
Karin and colleagues report their findings in the journal Nature.
By Daniel DeNoon
Reviewed by Louise Chang, M.D.
© 2007, WebMD Inc. All rights reserved
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