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New findings about cancer cell growth may hold promise for future cancer treatments

Karolinska Institutet Aug 08, 2021

The body's normal cell division is carefully controlled, where genes in the cell regulate when it is time to start and stop cell division.

Sometimes this balance is disturbed and the cell continues to divide uninhibitedly. After some time, a small collection of cells develops – cancer may be about to form.

“When a cell grows, new proteins are produced, among other things, through the translation of the cell's DNA information into mRNA, which forms the basis for the creation of proteins. The cell also needs to manufacture rRNA for the cell's small factories, the ribosomes, which are responsible for producing proteins,” says associate professor Mikael Lindström, co-author and part of professor Jiri Bartek's research group at the Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, who conducted the study.

In the study, the research group investigated cultured cancer cells and cancer tissue where the eIF4A3 protein’s expression was high compared to normal tissue.

By adding synthetically produced small molecules that can later be further developed into finished drugs, the production of eIF4A3 can be checked. The researchers then discovered two distinct changes in the cancer cells.

“Firstly, we saw that the blocking of eIF4A3 activated the protein p53, a protein that has an important role to play in fighting cancer cells,” says Dimitris Kanellis, postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, and the first author of the study.

Proteins counteract each other

However, one challenge with many types of tumours is that the positive functions of the p53 protein are counteracted by another protein, MDM2.

“Interestingly, we noted that the blocking eIF4A3 also meant that the MDM2 protein changed. This change helps to maintain and strengthen p53 and can be beneficial when we want to inhibit the growth of cancer cells,” continues Dimitris Kanellis.

The main conclusions of the study indicate that depletion or inhibition of eIF4A3 activates p53, alters the manufacturing process of proteins by disrupting ribosome biogenesis, and thereby inhibits the growth of cancer cells.

New opportunities for cancer patients

Knowledge of the importance of the eIF4A3 protein opens up new opportunities for better and more effective treatment of cancer patients.

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