Source: Thailand Medical News Dec 19, 2019 4 years, 11 months, 2 days, 7 hours, 47 minutes ago
Medical researchers at Children's Medical Center Research Institute at University Of Texas Southwestern (CRI) have uncovered why certain
melanoma cells are more likely to spread through the body. The discovery opens up a potential new avenue of treatment and could be used to help reduce the proportion of patients who progress from stage 3
melanoma to more-deadly stage 4 cancer.
Dr. Sean Morrison, Director of CRI and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) Investigator told
Thailand Medical News, "In prior studies we found there are intrinsic differences among
melanomas in their ability to metastasize or spread. Some are efficient metastasizers that readily form distant tumors whether you take them out surgically or not, while others are inefficient metastasizers that spread more slowly and that can be cured through surgery. Since metastasis is a major determinant of clinical outcomes, we have focused for several years on understanding why some
melanoma cells are better at it than others."
Medical scientists have long known that most cancer cells die when they attempt to metastasize from a primary tumor to other parts of the body. Those that are able to survive during metastasis must undergo poorly understood metabolic changes.
A past study conducted by the Morrison lab found one factor that limits the ability of
melanoma cells to spread to other parts of the body is the high level of oxidative stress cancer cells experience during metastasis when they enter the bloodstream.
Recently, another study at CRI in Dr. Ralph DeBerardinis' lab found that more aggressive lung cancer cells consume higher levels of
lactate. Based on these findings, scientists in the two labs hypothesized that some
melanoma cells might be better at metastasizing if they were better at consuming
lactate.
To confirm this hypothesis, researchers used techniques developed by the Morrison laboratory for studying the metastasis of human melanoma cells in specialized mice and techniques developed by the DeBerardinis lab to label and track the use of nutrients in tumors. The researchers discovered that efficient metastasizers take up more
lactate because they have higher levels of a
lactate transporter on their cell surface, called monocarboxylate transporter 1 (MCT1), as compared with inefficient metastasizers.
Dr. Alpaslan Tasdogan, lead author of the study and a postdoctoral researcher in the Morrison lab commented, "Efficient metastasizers are able to take up more
lactate, which allows them to increase their production of antioxidants that help them to survive in the blood. The findings in our paper, along with those made previously by the DeBerardinis lab, strongly suggest that increased
lactate uptake by cancer cells promotes disease progression. This correlates with&n
bsp;clinical data showing that patients with higher levels of MCT1 in their cancers have worse outcomes."
Findings of the study, published in
Nature, showed that melanomas growing in mice that were treated with an MCT1 inhibitor led to fewer
melanoma cells in the blood and fewer metastatic tumors. These data raise the possibility that MCT1 inhibitors, if given to patients before their cancer spreads, could reduce the proportion of patients who develop distant metastases, which are associated with systemic disease and much less likely to be curable.
Dr. DeBerardinis, Professor at CRI and an HHMI Investigator said, "This paper makes a compelling case for analyzing metabolism in tumors. It's a great example of how assessing tumor metabolism can identify differences that correlate with cancer aggressiveness. Then you can identify an activity related to metastasis, inhibit it with a drug, and reduce metastasis in the mouse. That's remarkable."
Reference : Alpaslan Tasdogan et al. Metabolic heterogeneity confers differences in melanoma metastatic potential, Nature (2019). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1847-2