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Cellular Starvation Kills Treatment Resistance Triple Negative Breast Cancer Cells

by Dr. Meenakshy Varier on November 23, 2016 at 11:23 AM
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Highlights

Cells from a vicious and treatment-resistant form of breast cancer, called triple negative breast cancer (TNBC), die off rapidly when deprived of a key nutrient called cystine, according to a new study by Duke University.


Patients diagnosed with triple negative breast cancer, which constitute about 10% to 20% of all breast cancer cases, have few treatment options outside of surgery and chemotherapy.

‘Blocking cystine uptake may be an effective way of treating not only triple negative breast cancer, but other aggressive cancers.’

TNBC-

Triple negative breast cancer or TNBC lacks three �receptors' known to fuel breast cancer. They are estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, or the Her2/neu receptors.

Though TNBS responds to chemotherapy, it does not respond to receptor targeted treatments.

The most successful breast cancer therapies target two of three receptors commonly found in tumor cells, but triple negative breast cancer cells lack all three.

In United States, breast cancer is the most common type of cancer that affects women after skin cancer. According to the American Cancer Society, the breast cancer estimates for 2016 are

Cancer rewires the metabolism of tumor cells, converting them into lean, mean, replicating machines. But tumor cells' amped-up metabolism can also make them dependent on specific nutrients for survival.

For years, scientists have been trying to identify and understand these cellular cravings in hopes of creating new cancer treatments that work by blocking off access to necessary nutrients and starving tumors to death.

By examining the cause of cell death, they found that this"cystine addiction" is triggered by a mechanism that many kinds of tumor cells use to break away and migrate to new locations in the body.

"This process is well-known and shows up in metastatic cancer cells, and what we found is that it also makes the cells cystine-addicted," said Jen-Tsan Ashley Chi, associate professor of molecular genetics and microbiology at the Duke University School of Medicine and senior author on the study.

"This is great news, because these are the cells that we really want to get rid of." added Jen-Tsan.

The results indicate that blocking cystine uptake may be an effective way of treating not only triple negative breast cancer, but other aggressive cancers that use this pathway during metastasis. The study appears online in Oncogene.

Some studies have hinted that these cells cannot survive without cystine, a molecule built from two copies of the amino acid cysteine linked together.

Nutrient Deprivation Test

The researchers submitted both triple-negative and estrogen-positive breast cancer cells to a nutrient deprivation test: growing batches of each cell type in a series of different growth media, each missing just one out of 15 key amino acids.

Most of the cells showed little reaction to these small changes in diet, Chi said. But there was one notable exception.

The triple negative breast cancer cells were very sensitive to cystine. So if you removed cystine, they just rapidly died, while the other breast cancer cells didn't care.

Cystine addiction is linked to a process called the epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT), that allows stationary epithelial cells, to transform themselves into roving mesenchymal cells.

The triple negative breast cancer cells, along with a number of other types of cancer cells, tap into this process to break away from their neighbors and metastasize to spread throughout the body.

But it appears that this process also triggers a cellular signaling pathway that leads to rapid death as soon as cystine is not available.

"We found that this transition between epithelial and mesenchymal basically opens up a signaling difference that makes the cells very vulnerable to cystine deprivation, leading to death," Chi said. "It is almost like EMT is opens up a whole highway system (for cystine-mediated death), and therapeutically this could be very useful because there are actually compounds to block this."

Chi says the team is now in the process of testing out these cystine-blocking molecules on tumors and searching for biomarkers that will help identify when cancers are likely to respond positively to this treatment.

References

  1. What are the key statistics about breast cancer? - (http://www.cancer.org/cancer/breastcancer/detailedguide/breast-cancer-key-statistics)


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