Albuquerque Journal

Study: Anti-cancer gene might fuel a tumor’s growth

Personaliz­ed treatment more desirable than ever before as knowledge grows

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A cancer-fighting gene known as the “guardian of the genome” actually promotes certain tumors, according to a study by researcher­s at the University of California, San Diego. That means drugs that affect its activity may backfire in some cases, fueling a tumor’s growth.

The gene, called p53, makes a protein that causes abnormal cells to self-destruct before they turn malignant. Mutated forms of the gene don’t perform this function as well.

About half of cancers have a mutated p53 gene, making it the most commonly mutated gene in malignanci­es. As such, it has been a major target of drug developmen­t to restore normal function. But in certain instances restoring normal function could help the tumor grow. So knowing what these drugs will do to a particular cancer is vital.

The study demonstrat­es a point that oncologist­s have been making for decades: Cancer is not one disease. What we call cancer is hundreds of genetic diseases that share certain characteri­stics. And as knowledge grows about the difference­s between cancers, the desirabili­ty of personaliz­ed treatment becomes more evident.

Cancers often occur gradually, with a series of mutations that weaken genetic defenses against abnormal growth. Their degree of aggressive­ness also varies. Some cancers are rapid-growing and require immediate treatment. Other are slowgrowin­g, and may not need immediate treatment.

Slow-growing cancers can cross a threshold and begin to spread rapidly. The activity of p53, or the lack of it, helps determine if and when that threshold is reached.

Ovarian cancer is one example in which the lack of normal p53 is implicated. In some aggressive ovarian cancers, the gene is mutated nearly all the time. But the gene is much less frequently mutated in hepatocell­ular or liver cancers.

Research found that restoring p53 function in mutated liver cancer cells improves their metabolism by indirectly causing cells to switch to a process called glycolysis, which involves the heavy use of sugar as an energy source.

Normally, cells use a process that is more energy-efficient, but limited by the availabili­ty of oxygen. Called oxidative phosphoryl­ation, it takes place in mitochondr­ia, organelles in cells that provide most of the body’s energy.

This metabolic change to glycolysis, called the Warburg effect, has been recognized for decades as a characteri­stic of cancer.

So, in liver cancers, promoting p53 function will induce this metabolic shift, energizing the cancer.

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