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Saturday, December 20, 2008 - 5:13 PM
Women with rapidly lethal ovarian cancer are more likely to harbor
tumors lacking a normal complement of two enzymes that facilitate the
silencing of genes, a new study shows. Meanwhile, patients who survive
significantly longer tend to have ample supplies of both compounds,
scientists report in the Dec. 18 New England Journal of Medicine.
Data on patients with other cancers also linked better survival to
adequate levels of one of these enzymes, the researchers find
If confirmed, the new finding might enable doctors to make more
precise prognoses for patients with ovarian cancer and possibly other
malignancies by testing for these enzymes in tumor tissue. The work may
also contribute to a further understanding of RNA interference, in
which microRNAs or another type of genetic fragment called small
interfering RNAs stop biosynthesis of proteins in a cell.
Dicer and Drosha, the enzymes measured in the new study, facilitate
the RNA interference process. Human cells make thousands of kinds of
RNA fragments, which scientists believe serve as safeguards that keep
abnormal proteins — or the wrong amount of them — from being
manufactured from their gene blueprints.
Dicer and Drosha also appear in normal cells, where the enzymes
perform their work unnoticed much of the time. “We are trying to
understand why this machinery is altered in cancer cells,” says Anil
Sood, a gynecologic oncologist at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson
Cancer Center in Houston.
Earlier work suggested that in cancerous cells a lack of Dicer might contribute to the malignant nature of the cells.
Sood and his colleagues analyzed Dicer and Drosha concentrations in
ovarian tumor tissue from 111 patients, dividing the samples into those
that contained high or low levels of the enzymes. The team found that
39 percent of women had the lower amounts of both enzymes.
On average, women with higher levels of both enzymes survived more
than11 years from the time of their diagnosis, whereas those with lower
amounts of Dicer and Drosha lived 2.7 years on average, the team
reports.
When the scientists accounted for differences between the groups
that included age, stage of the cancer and initial response to
chemotherapy, women with ample Dicer and Drosha still showed a median
survival that was four times longer than those with a shortage of the
enzymes. http://louissheehan.bravejournal.com
The researchers then analyzed information obtained from other sets
of patients with lung, breast and ovarian cancer. The team found that
shortages of both enzymes led to bleaker survival prospects in the
ovarian cancer group. But only low Dicer levels worsened survival in
people with the other two cancers.
Apparently, low amounts of these enzymes allow some genes to remain
switched on and encode proteins when they would be better off shut
down, Sood says. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
The study “provides evidence for a simple mechanism, based on the
biologic characteristics of microRNAs, for formulating a prognosis and
potentially guiding therapy in ovarian cancer,” say Frank Slack and
Joanne Weidhaas of Yale University, writing in the same issue of NEJM.
http://louis9j9sheehan.blog.com
The researchers are still missing an explanation for the shortage of
Dicer and Drosha in some of these cancer patients in the first place.
“I wish we had the exact answer,” says Sood. He and his team found
mutations in genes encoding the enzymes, but these defects didn’t seem
related to Dicer or Drosha amounts, he says.
The long-term hope is to harness these RNA fragments as drugs to
fight cancer, but that research is still at a theoretical stage, he
says.
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