Novel approach can reveal better breast cancer treatments
Baylor College of Medicine News Apr 19, 2017
The goal of cancer therapy is to destroy the tumor or stop it from growing and spreading to other parts of the body. Reaching toward this goal, a team of researchers from various institutions, including Baylor College of Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, has developed a new way to approach breast cancer treatment. First, they search for the proteins that drive tumor growth, and then test in the lab drugs that potentially neutralize these specific biological drivers.
The study appeared in the journal Nature Communications.
ÂHere we study the problem of how to design more effective cancer treatments with a two–pronged approach, said co–senior author Dr. Matthew Ellis, professor and director of the Lester and Sue Smith Breast Center and McNair Scholar at Baylor. ÂWe combine patient–derived xenografts and proteogenomic integration.Â
A patient–derived xenograft consists of a sample of a human tumor transplanted into a particular laboratory mouse.
In previous studies, the researchers showed this approach can be successful as patient–derived xenografts of breast tumors recapitulate most of the genes expressed and the proteins present in the original breast tumors. In addition, responses of breast cancer patient–derived xenografts to drug treatments resemble that observed in the corresponding patient. These results suggest that patient–derived xenografts of breast tumors are potential useful models in which to identify and test targets for breast cancer therapy.
Cancer cells may not only be different from normal cells in the types of genes they express but also in some of the proteins they use to carry out their functions. Some cancer proteins can drive normal cells into a path that leads to cancer and identifying and neutralizing these biological drivers may result in better treatments. Proteogenomic integration allows researchers to look at the proteins present and the genes expressed in the tumor, side by side. ÂProteins carry out most of the biological functions in the cell, said co–senior author Dr. Li Ding, an associate professor of medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. ÂKnowing the DNA sequence of genes does not automatically tell us everything about the proteins doing work in the cells.Â
ÂIdentifying the rogue proteins of cancer is an important pathway toward developing new drugs, said co–author Dr. R. Reid Townsend, professor of medicine and director of the National Institutes of Health / National Institute of General Medical Sciences Biomedical Mass Spectrometry Resource at Washington University.
In this study, the researchers used mass spectrometry, a leading method for detecting, quantifying and characterizing proteins, to determine the proteins present in each of 24 patient–derived xenografts of breast tumors representing different breast cancer subtypes. In total, they identified nearly 10,000 proteins and their relative abundances across tumors.
ÂA substantial number of these proteins identified in the xenograft model are potential targets for drugs, said Ellis. ÂIn addition, similar protein signatures were observed in breast cancer samples from patients, which suggests our approach has potential clinical relevance. In selected patient–derived xenografts of breast tumors in which the researchers observed certain Ârogue proteinsÂ, targeting those proteins with specific inhibitors resulted in suppression of tumor growth in the xenograft model, thus validating their two–pronged approach to cancer treatment.
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The study appeared in the journal Nature Communications.
ÂHere we study the problem of how to design more effective cancer treatments with a two–pronged approach, said co–senior author Dr. Matthew Ellis, professor and director of the Lester and Sue Smith Breast Center and McNair Scholar at Baylor. ÂWe combine patient–derived xenografts and proteogenomic integration.Â
A patient–derived xenograft consists of a sample of a human tumor transplanted into a particular laboratory mouse.
In previous studies, the researchers showed this approach can be successful as patient–derived xenografts of breast tumors recapitulate most of the genes expressed and the proteins present in the original breast tumors. In addition, responses of breast cancer patient–derived xenografts to drug treatments resemble that observed in the corresponding patient. These results suggest that patient–derived xenografts of breast tumors are potential useful models in which to identify and test targets for breast cancer therapy.
Cancer cells may not only be different from normal cells in the types of genes they express but also in some of the proteins they use to carry out their functions. Some cancer proteins can drive normal cells into a path that leads to cancer and identifying and neutralizing these biological drivers may result in better treatments. Proteogenomic integration allows researchers to look at the proteins present and the genes expressed in the tumor, side by side. ÂProteins carry out most of the biological functions in the cell, said co–senior author Dr. Li Ding, an associate professor of medicine at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. ÂKnowing the DNA sequence of genes does not automatically tell us everything about the proteins doing work in the cells.Â
ÂIdentifying the rogue proteins of cancer is an important pathway toward developing new drugs, said co–author Dr. R. Reid Townsend, professor of medicine and director of the National Institutes of Health / National Institute of General Medical Sciences Biomedical Mass Spectrometry Resource at Washington University.
In this study, the researchers used mass spectrometry, a leading method for detecting, quantifying and characterizing proteins, to determine the proteins present in each of 24 patient–derived xenografts of breast tumors representing different breast cancer subtypes. In total, they identified nearly 10,000 proteins and their relative abundances across tumors.
ÂA substantial number of these proteins identified in the xenograft model are potential targets for drugs, said Ellis. ÂIn addition, similar protein signatures were observed in breast cancer samples from patients, which suggests our approach has potential clinical relevance. In selected patient–derived xenografts of breast tumors in which the researchers observed certain Ârogue proteinsÂ, targeting those proteins with specific inhibitors resulted in suppression of tumor growth in the xenograft model, thus validating their two–pronged approach to cancer treatment.
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