A plant biologist at Tel Aviv University reports that a mechanism shared by plants and animals could halt cancer growth in humans.
A plant biologist at Tel Aviv University reports that a mechanism shared by plants and animals could halt cancer growth in humans. Shaul Yalovsky, of the Molecular Biology and Ecology of Plants Department at Tel Aviv University, has identified a 'switch' that can turn on cell growth in plants.
Now, in a laboratory setting, he can apply the mechanism to reshape cells, grow new tissues, and respond to bacterial or viral invaders.
The switch is actually a fat molecule that modulates a group of proteins called ROPs.
Yalovsky's research group, in collaboration with Prof. Yoav Henis and Dr. Joel Hirsch of TAU's Departments of Neurobiology and Biochemistry, has determined that this fat molecule is required for ROP activity.
Proteins very similar to ROPs exist in humans and provide chemical signals that tell cancer when to metastasize.
Now that they know how to regulate ROPs in plants, the researchers believe they are one step away from turning this ROP-like switch off in humans - a process which could prevent tumour growth.
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"When these proteins are turned 'on,' they can initiate processes like cell division and growth. Through our genetic engineering, these proteins could be manipulated in humans to speed up tissue healing, or turned off to slow or stop the growth of tumours," said Yalovsky.
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The team's research could also be applied in agriculture to reduce the need for chemical pesticides, they said. The mutant molecule they've devised induces plants to respond as though they are being attacked by pathogens. They then create a biological defence that protects them from infection.
In the research paper, the Tel Aviv University scientists describe how these mutations and mechanisms work, providing a new mechanism to control metastasis in cancer, or stop the deterioration of certain nerve cells in the brain. And in a broader sense, the researchers have created a long-desired platform to test the function of proteins.
"It is common for plant and animal geneticists to identify proteins, but remain unaware of their functions. We now have a mechanism to test our hypotheses," Yalovsky added.
The study has been reported in the scientific journal Current Biology.
Source-ANI