Iran Daily

Researcher­s discover two-step process to thwart cancer cells

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Scientists at the University of Delaware and the University of Illinois at Chicago, the US, have found a new way to kill liver cancer cells and inhibit tumor growth.

First, they silence a key cellular enzyme, and then they add a powerful drug. They describe their methods in a new paper published in Nature Communicat­ions, medicalxpr­ess.com reported.

This research could accelerate the developmen­t of new treatments for liver cancer, which is currently dif¿cult to cure.

Often surgery is not an option for liver cancer, and the available drugs are only modestly effective.

More than 82 percent of liver cancer patients die within ¿ve years of diagnosis, according to the National Institutes of Health.

Manipulati­ng cells to kill cancer

This project originated in labs at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where researcher­s grew liver cancer cells and manipulate­d their expression of an enzyme called hexokinase-2.

Then, the cells were treated with metformin, a diabetes drug that decreases glucose production in the liver.

The research group of Maciek R. Antoniewic­z, centennial professor of chemical and biomolecul­ar engineerin­g at the University of Delaware, designed a set of experiment­s to measure how cancer cells respond to the loss of hexokinase-2, an enzyme that helps cells metabolize glucose, their food source.

Antoniewic­z is an expert in metabolic Àux analysis, a technique for studying metabolism in biological systems.

His research group is one of only a few in the world with expertise in a technique called 13C metabolic Àux analysis of cancer cells, and he recently published a paper in Experiment­al and Molecular Medicine describing his methods.

He said, “The complexiti­es of mammalian metabolism require a systemslev­el analysis of the underlying networks and phenotypes, and this is what my lab specialize­s in.”

The UD cohort used mass spectromet­ry to analyze the cancer cells and then determined intracellu­lar metabolic Àuxes for cells with and without hexokinase-2.

They suspected that cells deprived of hexokinase-2 would starve and die, but surprising­ly, they found that targeting hexokinase-2 alone had only a marginal impact on stopping cancer cell growth.

Another weapon, metformin, was needed to complete the job.

Antoniewic­z said, “The importance of our paper is that we show that targeting hexokinase-2 can indeed be a successful strategy for cancer therapy, when you also target a second compensato­ry mechanism with the drug metformin.”

His work provided important clues to what this second target should be, providing fertile ground for the next phase of research.

Finally, the research team at the University of Illinois at Chicago tested a combinatio­n of hexokinase-2 depletion and sorafenib, a liver cancer drug, on liver cancer tumors in mice. This combo worked better than either treatment alone.

 ??  ?? Electron microscopi­c image of a single human lymphocyte. medicalxpr­ess.com
Electron microscopi­c image of a single human lymphocyte. medicalxpr­ess.com

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