Cancer with a twist: protein instrumental in breast-cancer metastasis.A protein called Twist, which orchestrates gene activity in cells, facilitates the spread of some breast cancers, according to a study in the June 25 Cell. Because it induces a cell to disengage dis·en·gage v. dis·en·gaged, dis·en·gag·ing, dis·en·gag·es v.tr. 1. To release from something that holds fast, connects, or entangles. See Synonyms at extricate. 2. from its surroundings and float freely, Twist lets nascent cells migrate. Without such movement, embryonic development would come to a halt. This central role in cell migration has also implicated the protein in cancer metastasis metastasis /me·tas·ta·sis/ (me-tas´tah-sis) pl. metas´tases 1. transfer of disease from one organ or part of the body to another not directly connected with it, due either to transfer of pathogenic microorganisms or to . By screening dozens of mouse genes, physician Sridhar Ramaswamy of Harvard Medical School Harvard Medical School (HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. It is a prestigious American medical school located in the Longwood Medical Area of the Mission Hill neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. in Boston and his colleagues found that the one encoding Twist was active in breast cancer that had arisen spontaneously. Mice displaying forms of the cancer most prone to spread had the highest amounts of Twist in their tumors. Twist binds to DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. , switching on some genes and turning off others. For example, one Twist-regulated gene encodes a protein called E-cadherin, which works like two-sided sticky tape to hold together cells. Ramaswamy's team has now shown that Twist turns off the gene that encodes E-cadherin in breast-cancer cells. That drop in E-cadherin production may permit the malignant cells to slip their moorings and travel throughout the body. To further clarify Twist's role in metastasis, Ramaswamy and his coworkers injected highly metastatic Metastatic The term used to describe a secondary cancer, or one that has spread from one area of the body to another. Mentioned in: Coagulation Disorders metastatic pertaining to or of the nature of a metastasis. breast-cancer cells into mice. Some of the cells were genetically altered to obstruct production of Twist, while others were unimpaired Adj. 1. unimpaired - not damaged or diminished in any respect; "his speech remained unimpaired" undamaged - not harmed or spoiled; sound uninjured - not injured physically or mentally . Animals receiving the Twist-disabled cells had fewer cancer cells in their blood, indicating that the protein helps cells migrate. Moreover, while traces of the cancer showed up in lung tissues of both sets of mice, it proliferated into lung tumors only in mice with Twist. This difference may reflect Twists role as a master regulator of genes beyond those participating in migration. The researchers also studied human breast-cancer tissue. They found evidence that women whose cancer originated in the milk-producing lobes of the breast have concentrations of Twist more than 1.5 times as great as women with cancer originating in the mammary ducts. Lobular lob·ule n. 1. A small lobe. 2. A section or subdivision of a lobe. lob breast cancer is more likely than ductal cancer to metastasize me·tas·ta·size v. To be transmitted or transferred by or as if by metastasis. Metastasize Spread of cells from the original site of the cancer to other parts of the body where secondary tumors are formed. . Scientists don't yet know why cancer cells--and particularly these aggressive lobular breast-cancer cells--produce excess Twist. The new study was "very carefully done, says Mary Jo Fackler, a molecular biologist at Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions in Baltimore. It solidifies Twist as a molecule worth studying to sort out the biological underpinnings of metastasis. Fackler's group had already included Twist in their tests to identify factors that promote the spread of breast cancers through the body. |
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