Scientists at the Universities of York and
Texas have found that a component of cancer cells, which acts like a
'cellular post office', could be the key to preventing the spread of
lung cancer to other parts of the body.
The findings
could point towards new therapeutics, targeted at a particular
communication mechanism in the cell. This communication triggers a
change in the scaffolding of the cell perimeter - altering from a fixed
shape, attached to an organ, to a less stable one, moving freely around
the body.
The 'post office'
of the cell, or the Golgi apparatus as it is more commonly known, has
the ability to package proteins in order to transport them to other
parts of the cell or to deliver them to areas outside of the cell.
Researchers identified that a protein, called PAQR11, inside the
'cellular post office', receives a signal from another protein, called
Zeb1; the communication between the two proteins prompts the transport
of membrane sacks inside the Golgi.
These sacks, or vesicles, change their delivery routes and fundamentally alter the perimeter of the cancer cells making it possible for the cell to detach from its fixed position in the lung and travel to other areas of the body.
Dr Daniel Ungar, from the University of York's Department of Biology, said: "If we think of the cancer
cell like a tent structure; it has fixed sides to hold its shape and is
firmly anchored to the ground in order to secure its contents. It
cannot conceivably be moved until its architecture is altered somehow.
"In order to move the tent, we have to rearrange its contents and
collapse its sides in order to lift it out of its anchored position and
carry it away. A similar process happens with cancer when it
metastasises – its outer edges are altered resulting in it becoming
un-anchored."
The Golgi, which is the delivery centre for communications between
proteins, hence the name 'cellular post office', receives the
communication between two proteins, which signals that the movement of
membrane sacks around the cell should be changed. This change in
movement alters the perimeter of the cancer cell and, much like a tent's
sides collapsing, allows it to move from its original resting place to
anywhere in body.
Dr Ungar added: "Now that we recognise this system, there is the
potential to develop a drug that interferes with this communication and
prevents the Golgi apparatus from facilitating the movement of the
membrane sacks. The next stage of this study will be to look at how we
target this process without interrupting normal cellular functions of
non-cancerous cells."
SOURCE:
LiveScience



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