Scientists have discovered that the overproduction of a key protein in stem cells causes those stem cells to form cancerous tumors.
Scientists have discovered that the overproduction of a key protein in stem cells causes those stem cells to form cancerous tumors. Their work on the stem cell-cancer link may prove the foundation for new treatments for a variety of cancers. Dr. Jon Horowitz, associate professor of molecular biomedical sciences, and a team of at North Carolina State University researchers looked at the protein SP2, which regulates the activity of other genes.
They knew that elevated amounts of SP2 had been observed in human prostate-cancer patients, and that these levels only increased as the tumors became more dangerous.
Horowitz and the team decided to look at SP2 as a possible cause of tumor formation in epithelial cell-derived tumors, which comprise about 80 percent of all human tumors; epithelial cells cover the body's internal and external surfaces.
They found that overproduction of the SP2 protein in epithelial stem cells stopped them from spawning mature descendants. The affected stem cells, unable to produce mature cells, just kept proliferating, resulting in the formation of tumors.
"Something happens to normal stem cells that changes the way SP2 is regulated, and it starts being overproduced," Horowitz said.
"SP2 basically hijacks the stem cell, and turns it into its evil twin - a cancer cell," he said.
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The researchers' results are published in the Nov. 3 edition of the journal Cancer Research.
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