At
the same time, said Pan Zheng, assistant professor of pathology
and Liu's coworker, "in transplantation, we might use the
switch to decrease the sensitivity of immune recognition and make
the transplant more successful."
The
discovery, published in the November 26 issue of the journal Nature,
was made in tumors implanted into mice.
The
study identified a master gene that controls the primary means
by which cells alert the immune system of a problem -- that the
cell is infected by a virus or that it has become cancerous, for
example.
The
system works by taking fragments of materials produced inside
the cell and displaying those fragments on the outside of the
cell. This work is done by major histocompatibility complex type
I (MHC-I) molecules.
MHC-I
molecules are produced deep inside the cell and are then transported
to the cell surface. During that journey, a piece of a different
molecule from elsewhere in the cell is attached to it. The MHC-I
molecule carries that fragment to the cell surface where the fragment
sticks out on display.
In
this way, a bit of every protein produced in cells ends up displayed
on the cell's surface.
These
displayed fragments are routinely "inspected" by immune
cells known either as killer T-cells or cytotoxic lymphocytes
(CTLs). CTLs patrol the body and check the surface of cells for
the molecular fragments displayed by MHC molecules.
If
the fragments are those of proteins that are normal to the body,
the CTL continues on its way. But if the fragment comes from a
foreign protein -- such as a protein produced by a virus or an
abnormal protein produced by a cancer cell -- the CTL destroys
the cell.
In
many types of cancer, however, the MHC-I system is shut down in
tumor cells. Until this study, researchers didn't know why or
how the MHC-I system was turned off.
"Our
findings provide a very attractive explanation for that observation,"
said Liu.
Liu,
Zheng, and their colleagues have found a mutation that shuts down
the MHC-I transport system, a mutation which blocks the normal
production of a protein known as PML.
Furthermore,
the researchers found that PML activates four other genes, all
of which are needed by the MHC-I system. Blocking just one of
these genes would be enough to inactivate the MHC-I system, said
Liu, but the loss of PML affects all four genes.
"That
suggests it might be a master gene," said Liu.
The
PML protein has been known for a while, he said, but its function
was not clear. "To find PML linked to these genes was a surprise."
Zheng
and Liu are now investigating the mechanism by which PML controls
the four genes, and how that correlates with the progression of
cancer in human tumors.
Zheng
is also determining how frequently the PML gene goes awry in human
tumors. MHC-I down-regulation is already known to occur in 80
percent of human prostate cancers, the researchers said. The PML
malfunction may also contribute to the tumor's ability to spread
to other areas of the body (i.e., to metastasize).
This
research was supported by grants from the National Institutes
of Health, Kaplan Comprehensive Cancer Center of New York University
Medical Center, and by the Ohio State University Comprehensive
Cancer Center.
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by Ohio State
University, www.osu.edu.
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