Newswise, June 30, 2016 — A “combined therapy” approach to
treating the most common form of brain cancer could prove promising, scientists
say.
Glioblastoma is not only the most common form of brain cancer,
it’s also the most deadly. It affects people from around 40 years of age, and
most people live for less than 2 years after aggressive therapy. “This is a
devastating disease,” says Simona Parrinello of the MRC’s Clinical Sciences
Centre, who led the research.
New treatments are urgently needed, and in a study published
today in eLife, the team shows that targetting just one protein has two
effects, it both halts the division of the cancer cells, and stops these cells
from spreading through normal tissue, a two-in-one approach.
“Current treatments often fail because the tumours spread
throughout the brain, and so can’t be fully removed by surgery. If we can
target this spread, it may be possible to make therapies more effective. When
we target this one protein we block two key features of the tumour: its ability
to divide and its ability to invade. It could be a combined therapy in one,”
says Parrinello.
Scientists are not clear exactly how the cancer cells invade
the brain in patients with this condition, though they know that one key route
is through the space that surrounds blood vessels.
It is also known that it’s a critical subset of cancer cells
that appears to favour this route. These are called “glioblastoma stem-like
cells”, or GSCs, because they behave in a similar way to stem cells in the
developing and adult brain.
GSCs are particularly resistant to chemotherapy and
radiotherapy. Scientists believe that this, and their ability to invade, could
mean it’s these cells that are responsible for the regular recurrence of
glioblastoma after initial treatment.
In this study, Parrinello’s team used a cutting-edge technique
called intravital imaging, to watch GSC invasion within the normal brain in real
time.
Using this technique, the team discovered that when healthy
cells first develop non-cancerous mutations, blood vessels within the brain
keep them in a compartment so that they cannot spread and cause damage.
They found that the vessels do this by producing a protein,
called ephrin-B2, which appears to immobilise the cells and hold them in place.
However, when cells become cancerous GSCs, they are able to override this
anti-invasion signal, and escape the compartment.
Crucially, Parrinello showed that the GSCs do this by
producing their own ephrin-B2, which makes them insensitive to the ephrin-B2
already on the blood vessels.
The study also shows that a positive feedback effect comes
into play along with the raised levels of ephrin-B2. At high levels, the
protein appears to act as a signal, telling the GSCs to divide.
The team tried blocking ephrin-B2 using mouse models created
with tumour cells from patients with the condition, a “gold standard” test for
potential treatments in people.
They found that the tumour cells were unable to divide and
spread through the brain. This resulted in tumours shrinking in size and the
mice outliving those that did not receive the treatment, with some tumours
disappearing completely.
Parrinello says it is exciting that one treatment targets two key traits of a tumour.
“The ephrin-B2 system is complex, but in this case it works in
our favour. By blocking one molecule we affect two key aspects of the tumour,”
says Parrinello.
“In addition, because ephrin-B2 levels are much higher in
tumour cells relative to normal cells, blocking this protein should have
minimal side-effects”.
Whilst an important discovery, the scientists expect that it
will be many years before this treatment is ready to be tested in people.
In this study, they
explored one particular sub-type of glioblastoma. Parrinello now plans to
investigate how other subtypes respond, and whether other signalling molecules
play a similar role to ephrin-B2.
Earlier this year, Parrinello won a ‘Programme Foundation Award’
grant from Cancer Research UK worth £1.5 million. Her Cell Interactions and
Cancer group has also been awarded a grant from MRC Technology, which will
allow the team to explore how this treatment might be used alongside existing
approaches such as chemotherapy and surgery.
In this study, the CSC scientists worked with colleague
Vincenzo De Paola to set up the technique for intravital imaging of the tumour
cells, with Steven Pollard from the MRC Centre for Regenerative Medicine in
Edinburgh, who supplied patient cells, and with Jorge Martinez-Torrecuadrada
from the Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Oncologicas in Madrid who developed
the molecule that blocks ephrin-B2. Federico Roncaroli of the University of
Manchester provided and analysed human tumour material. Paul Bertone from the
European Bioinformatics Institute in Cambridge assisted with the bioinformatics
analysis of the results.
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