New Cancer Gene Identified
Oncogene Plays a
Critical Role in Tumor Formation
NEW YORK, January 20, 2005 - Scientists at Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center (MSKCC) have identified a new cellular oncogene essential
for the development of cancer. Oncogenes are genes that, when mutated
or dysfunctional, lead normal cells to become cancerous. The
investigators have named the gene POKEMON (for POK Erythroid Myeloid
Ontogenic factor). The work is being published in the January 20, 2005,
issue of Nature.
"There are a number of genes that can cause cancer, the so-called
oncogenes, but Pokemon is unique in that it is needed for other
oncogenes to cause cancer." said MSKCC cancer geneticist Pier Paolo
Pandolfi, MD, PhD, the senior author of the study. "More important,
because the Pokemon protein plays such a crucial role in the formation
of cancer, it could prove to be an effective target for new drug
therapies."
Pokemon works by controlling the pathways that are required to
transform normal cells to cancerous ones. The researchers found that
when they "knocked out" the Pokemon gene in mice, that transformation
was blocked and cells do not become cancerous. (Knocking out a gene
means inactivating it through genetic engineering.) A drug that could
block the protein's function in the same way could be a powerful
anticancer agent.
"Pokemon is a main switch in the molecular network that leads toward
cancer," Dr. Pandolfi added. "If we could turn Pokemon off, it may
block this oncogenic circuitry and stall the malignant process."
The investigators confirmed Pokemon's cancer-causing role by inserting
the oncogene into mice. Pokemon does its damage by repressing the
function of other proteins, including a tumor suppressor called ARF.
The mice developed aggressive, fatal forms of lymphoma. In further
work, using a technique called tissue micro arrays to study tumor
samples from people with many types of cancer, they confirmed that
Pokemon is present in very high levels in certain types of B-cell and
T-cell lymphomas. They also found that tumors with high levels of
Pokemon protein were much more likely to be aggressive.
"Pokemon is a member of a family of proteins that are known to be
transcription factors and are mutated in human cancer," said Takahiro
Maeda, MD, PhD, a postdoctoral research fellow in Dr. Pandolfi's
laboratory who was the paper's first author. "It is likely that the
protein plays a role in solid tumors as well, and we now have means to
specifically interfere with the activity of these transcription
factors."
Other authors on the paper were Robin M. Hobbs, PhD; Taha Merghoub,
PhD; Ilhem Guernah, MS; Carlos Cordon-Cardo, MD, PhD; and Julie
Teruya-Feldstein, MD from MSKCC; and Arthur Zelent, PhD, of the
Institute of Cancer Research in the United Kingdom. The work was
supported in part by a grant from the National Cancer Institute.
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