In colorectal cancer, silenced p16 could explain why older people get this type of cancer more than younger people.
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Functional characterization of age-dependent p16 epimutation reveals biological drivers and therapeutic targets for colorectal cancer
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‘In colorectal cancer-bearing mice, a newly developed strategy decreased tumor growth and improved survival. ’
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In this study, the Shen lab and colleagues developed the first animal model of colorectal cancer that mimics the developmental process of the human condition. Using this model, the team investigated a particular change in the second gene called p16 and its effect in colorectal cancer growth. ![twitter](https://images.medindia.net/icons/news/social/twitter.png)
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Normally, gene p16 suppresses tumor growth, but as people age, p16 is silenced. Aging is the strongest risk factor for colorectal cancer.
p16 Gene Suppression in Colorectal Cancer
In this case, p16 is not silenced by a mutation of the DNA sequence of the gene itself, but by a different process called epimutation. Epimutations are chemical modifications such as attaching or removing a methyl chemical group in a gene. This chemical modification or methylation acts like a switch, turning p16 off when adding a methyl group and turning it on by removing the methyl group. This is important from the therapeutic point of view, because, unlike mutations which are difficult to reverse, epimutations are intrinsically reversible.“Our animal model is the first to include both a genetic mutation called Apc that can initiate a benign tumor growth, and an epigenetic change, methylation of gene p16,” Shen said. “We conducted long-term survival and microscopy analysis of tumor development and progression and found that mice carrying combined Apc mutation and p16 epimutation had significantly shortened survival and increased tumor growth compared to those with Apc mutation only.”
Interestingly, colorectal tumors with the gene p16 turned off were growing in a microenvironment that suppressed the immune response against the tumor, favoring cancer growth. These observations prompted the researchers to test a combined treatment for these tumors.
“We combined a drug that inhibits DNA methylation of gene p16, turning it on, with another drug that removes the suppression on the immune response, allowing it to attack the tumor,” Shen said. “The combined drug treatment was more effective for improving survival in tumor-bearing mice than each drug alone.”
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“We seek to better understand the mechanisms by which epimutations frequently observed in cancer cells contribute to cancer development and progression,” Shen said. “Our animal model is a valuable laboratory tool to study these mechanisms and also to screen potential treatments that could later be developed as therapies for patients.”
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- Functional characterization of age-dependent p16 epimutation reveals biological drivers and therapeutic targets for colorectal cancer - (https://jeccr.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13046-023-02689-y)