Sunday News

New key to unlocking cancer cure

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AUSTRALIAN researcher­s have made a breakthrou­gh in the fight against cancer and are working to find a way to get the body’s natural killer cells to eliminate cancerous cells.

Researcher­s at Melbourne’s Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre have discovered a new molecule that a cancer cell can produce on its surface to convince the body’s natural killer cells it poses no danger.

The research team, led by Dr Dan Andrews and Professor Mark Smyth from the Cellular Immunology Laboratory at the centre, says the cancer cells fool the body’s natural immune defences into ignoring their threat.

Andrews said the discovery would open the door to the developmen­t of new treatments to interrupt this deception.

The findings were published in the prestigiou­s scientific journal Nature Immunology.

Andrews says each natural killer cell is part of a roving biological security team, performing sweeping scans by temporaril­y binding one of its receptors to a correspond­ing molecule on every cell’s surface, like a key into a lock.

‘‘When a cell becomes infected or damaged, it loses these surface molecules; when a natural killer cell cannot find a lock to bind to, it recognises that cell as a threat and destroys it,’’ he says.

Researcher­s from around the world have been hunting for each lock to correspond to the 10 identified natural killer cell surface keys, but only investigat­ing the MHC-I class of molecule, or classical MHC-I.

The lock Andrews and his team have discovered, called H2-M3, is a non-classical MHC-I molecule.

‘‘Now we have identified the role H2-M3 plays in cancer growth, we can learn more about how it binds to natural killer cell receptors and plan new therapies to specifical­ly target these types of interactio­ns,’’ Andrews said.

‘‘Blocking this exchange could prevent natural killer cells from binding to cancerous cells and accepting them as harmless, instead prompting the natural killer cells to recognise and destroy them efficientl­y, as they would any other disease, invading virus or bacteria.’’

Andrews said that understand­ing how natural killer cells recognise the H2-M3 lock is a huge step forward in the journey toward new immunother­apies for patients.

‘‘Although these are early days, it is exciting to make discoverie­s that may very well result in new ways to help a patient’s immune system fight cancer.

‘‘Right now, we have one more molecule to work on, and the possibilit­y of many more tomorrow.’’

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