The Star Malaysia

Potential cancer breakthrou­gh

Scientists discover protein that controls spread of disease

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Paris: Scientists have pinpointed a cancer protein which controls the disease’s spread from the skin to other organs, and proposed that blocking it may be an effective treatment.

Working with mice geneticall­y engineered to develop human skin cancers, the team discovered that the protein plays a key role promoting – or inhibiting – metastasis, the spread of cancer from one area or organ to another.

Dubbed Midkine, the protein is secreted by melanomas – the most serious type of skin cancer – before travelling to a different part of the mouse body to kickstart cancer formation, they said.

In subsequent observatio­ns in humans, high levels of Midkine in the lymph nodes of skin cancer patients were predictive of “significan­tly worse” outcomes, the team reported in the science journal Nature.

This was the case even if there were no tumour cells in the lymph nodes.

“In Midkine we have found a possible strategy that merits considerat­ion for drug developmen­t,” said Marisol Soengas of the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre in Madrid, a coauthor of the study.

Early detection is important in melanoma. After it starts spreading, patient prognosis is usually poor.

It was long thought that melanoma prepares the organs it intends to colonise by activating the growth of fluidtrans­porting lymph vessels – first in and around the primary tumour, then the surroundin­g lymph nodes, and so on.

However, removing lymph nodes next to a melanoma tumour does not prevent metastases, meaning there is “something missing” in our understand­ing of the spread mechanism, said the researcher­s.

The new study offers a possible answer.

“When these tumours are aggressive, they act at a distance much earlier than previously thought,” said the authors.

Midkine travelled directly to the new cancer site irrespecti­ve of lymph vessel formation around the original tumour.

When Midkine was inhibited in mouse tumours, metastasis was blocked as well, said the team.

“These results indicate a change of paradigm in the study of melanoma metastasis,” according to Soengas.

The team used special mice to track metastasis through a luminescen­t protein that lights up when a new area of the body is affected by cancer formation.

What is not known is whether Midkine is transporte­d in the blood, in lymph, or both.

In a comment, also published by Nature, Ayuko Hoshino and David Lyden of the Weill Cornell Medicine, a university in New York, said the study provided “muchneeded insights” for the prediction of metastatic risk.

The work, they concluded, “might open a door to diagnostic and therapeuti­c strategies that aim to deal with metastases before they have a chance to arise.”

 ?? — AFP ?? Vital discovery: The team of scientists found that the protein plays a key role promoting or inhibiting metastasis, the spread of cancer from one area or organ to another.
— AFP Vital discovery: The team of scientists found that the protein plays a key role promoting or inhibiting metastasis, the spread of cancer from one area or organ to another.

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