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Scientists study use of abundant enzyme in tumor cells to monitor cancer treatment (24 notícias)

Publicado em 12 de janeiro de 2021

Por The Aggregator

The abundant presence of an enzyme known as low molecular weight protein tyrosine phosphatase (LMWPTP) in tumor cells has long been considered an indicator of cancer aggressiveness and metastatic potential. It is also known to perform important functions in cells under normal conditions, participating both in the proliferation process and in the regulation of intracellular systems. Research continues on its role in the progression of cancer.

In Brazil, a group of researchers from the Bioassay and In Vitro Signal Transduction Laboratory at the University of Campinas, led by Professor Carmen Veríssima Ferreira-Halder, is studying the possibility of inhibiting this protein phosphatase to create new opportunities for monitoring and cancer treatment and other diseases.

“We believe that inhibition of LMWPTP can contribute to the treatment of several diseases,” said Ferreira-Halder. “In our case, the focus is cancer, but research shows that it is also associated with autoimmune diseases and diabetes, among others.”

Ferreira-Halder was principal investigator of the Thematic Project “Low molecular weight protein tyrosine phosphatase in colorectal cancer: from the bench to the generation of the product”, supported by FAPESP and concluded in June 2020.

Phosphatase favors the action of intratumor proteins that help tumors to divide, migrate and metastasize. “That is why we say that it is a ‘hub’, in the sense that it controls several processes that together make tumor cells resistant to treatment and capable of migrating and establishing metastases,” he said.

A group review article published in Cell and Molecular Life Sciences describes 14 years of research on LMWPTP and its contribution to cancer treatment. “Our group was one of the first to show that this enzyme contributes to resistance to chemotherapy in leukemic cells,” said Ferreira-Halder. “We also found that the more advanced the tumor stage, the greater the amount of the enzyme. With these findings as a basis, research carried out in collaboration with the group led by Professor Maikel Peppelenbosch of Erasmus University Medical Center in Rotterdam [Erasmus MC, Netherlands] validated the importance of LMWPTP for other types of cancer, such as prostate, colorectal and stomach cancer. This research showed us that LMWPTP not only weakens the response to chemotherapy drugs, but is also associated with an increased capacity for metastasis ”.

Druggable target

The review article, whose first author is Alessandra Valéria de Sousa Faria, also discusses the available substances that inhibit LMWPTP and the characteristics that hinder the development of drugs against it. Ferreira-Halder believes that it is not yet possible to talk about treatment based on LMWPTP inhibition, but the strategy can be used for other purposes.

“Our initial goal is to use this enzyme as a biomarker for the purpose of monitoring treatment, and also to classify patients in terms of disease severity. In my opinion, it can be done in a relatively short time, ”she said. “As for treatment, there is still a lot of work to be done. Professor Nunzio Bottini, from the University of California at San Diego [U.S.] filed a patent application for a highly effective inhibitor that can be administered orally. In fact, he and his group synthesized several inhibitors, but published only one. We may have a surprise and a drug will be developed more quickly. Who knows?”

The main challenges to be faced in the development of inhibitors are specificity – the drug must act specifically in the LMWPTP, which is part of a family of about 100 highly similar phosphatases – and stability, so that the drug remains active in the body. “Until Bottini and his group filed for a patent, all inhibitors acted on several members of the family,” said Ferreira-Halder.

Some of the substances mentioned in the review were developed for other purposes, but they also inhibit LMWPTP and can be used to treat cancer, according to Faria, who recently defended his doctoral thesis on how LMWPTP affects platelets, small fragments of cells in the bloodstream that play a key role in clotting.

Platelets

Faria’s research on LMWPTP began with his role in the colorectal Cancer and platelet reaction in this microenvironment. “As our investigation of platelet as biology progressed, we realized how much more knowledge of the enzyme’s action on platelets was needed, “she said.

The first part of the study consisted of verifying the action of LMWPTP and protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B) on platelets, both in metabolism and in function. The second focused on the influence of platelets on the expression of LMWPTP in cells.

“The goal was to find out to what extent tumor cells can ‘educate’ platelets to support certain events, such as metastases, for example, and conversely to what extent platelets ‘educate’ the tumor cells to guarantee their survival and proliferation ”, explained Faria.

For Ferreira-Halder, the relationship seems to be two-way. “However, the action of tumor cells probably predominates. They practically program the platelets to work for you, “she said.