Sheffield: Scientists have made an important breakthrough in understanding why some cancer cells become resistant to chemotherapy. Researchers from the University of Sheffield have identified a
specific modification to proteins that wrap around the DNA of cancer
cells, protecting them from chemotherapy treatment. Most types of chemotherapy and radiotherapy kill cancer cells by
causing many breaks in the DNA – the blueprint that carries the
information needed to make proteins, and for cells to survive.
Unfortunately,
cancer cells fight back by trying to fix the breaks through a toolkit
of specialised armies, giving cancer resistance to therapy.
However the team from the Krebs Institute for Nucleic Acids at the
University of Sheffield found that the key to preventing resistance to a
common class of chemotherapy used to treat breast and colon cancer is
to change the speed in which the cancer cells repair damage to their DNA
that is introduced by chemotherapy.
Professor Sherif El-Khamisy, who led the research, said: “If we can
find a way to hijack the cancer’s fix and repair toolkit and make it
less efficient, then we can tip the scale in favour of cancer cell death
instead of survival and prevent resistance to chemotherapy.
“We have discovered that resistance to a common class of
chemotherapy, used to treat colon and breast cancer, is caused by
changes in the speed by which the tool kit components travel to, and
stay at, the sites of DNA breaks.
“Our researchers were able to identify a change in a specific mark in
the proteins that wrap the DNA – called histones – in such a way that
makes repair much faster in cancer cells, increasing their resistance to
therapy.”
Professor El-Khamisy, a Wellcome Trust Investigator and the Director
of Research and Innovation at the University’s Department of Molecular
Biology and Biotechnology, has been working on the research for four
years. The findings are published today (Friday 28 October 2016) in the
journal Nucleic Acids Research.
“The change we identified is not genetic – but epigenetic,” said Professor El-Khamisy.
“This means that the histone mark proteins are like the directors in a
film. The script of the film stays the same but the director - the
histone mark - can choose to eliminate, slow down or speed up certain
scenes or dialogues, altering the film for better – cancer cell death -
or worse – cancer cell survival.”
He added: “The team were able to inhibit the activity of the enzyme
that controls the ‘scene’ ensuring that the film always has a happy
ending – reversing the resistance of cancer cells.
“This means that patients who develop resistance to certain classes
of chemotherapy can benefit from drugs that modulate histone marks such
as histone deacetylase inhibitors, some of which are already approved by
the Food and Drug Administration.
“We only focused on a class of chemotherapy used to treat colon and
breast cancer called topoisomerase I inhibitors. It is possible that the
same mechanism holds true for other classes of chemotherapy.”