Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Indian-Origin Scientist Develops New Drug To Treat Blood Cancer

The Canadian Press, 12 Jun, 2017 12:16 PM
    A new drug for blood cancer that may provide better treatment alone or combined with chemotherapy has been developed by a team led by an Indian-origin scientist.
     
    Acute lymphoblastic leukemia or ALL can affect both children and adults.
     
    Scientists have found up to 30 per cent of adult ALL patients have what is called a Philadelphia chromosome, where two segments of chromosomes have aberrantly fused together.
     
    The ALL cancer cells containing the Philadelphia chromosome are addicted to repairing DNA.
     
    "Repairing DNA may sound like a good thing when you are talking about healthy cells. But in this case it is a bad thing. When you treat these leukemia cells with chemotherapy, you want DNA damage to accumulate so the cancer cells will die," said Srividya Bhaskara, a Assistant Professor at University of Utah in the US..
     
    "However, because the Philadelphia chromosome continually causes repair, these cells do not retain enough DNA damage to die. Essentially they resist any kind of drug you use on them.
     
    So we had to find a new way to overcome this DNA repair addiction," she said.
     
    Researchers found that the Philadelphia chromosome promotes repair through numerous proteins. But putting together a cocktail of drugs to inhibit them all would likely be too toxic and affect normal cells.
     
    Bhaskara focused on two specific proteins she found were directly involved in DNA repair, called histone deacetylases (HDAC) 1 and 2. She then collaborated with a company to make a drug that inhibits HDAC1,2 activity.
     
    After a comprehensive analysis of how the drug worked, Bhaskara tested the HDAC1,2 inhibitor in patient samples and mice and saw encouraging results, either alone or in combination with a chemotherapy drug called doxorubicin.
     
     
    Doxorubicin is one of the components of the chemotherapy cocktail regimen currently used for Philadelphia chromosome- positive ALL patients.
     
    Researchers found that the drugs broke down the central hub of DNA repair, and the HDAC1,2 inhibitor actually reduced different repair protein functions.
     
    "The treated mice did not get sick from the drug, and we did not see any apparent toxic side-effects in them. And when the drug was combined with a low concentration of doxorubicin, it had additional therapeutic benefits," Bhaskara said.
     
    "We actually show in the patient-derived mouse models that using the combination of drugs, or HDAC1,2 inhibitor alone, is sufficient to decrease the leukemia load," she said.
     
    Leukemia is a white blood cell disease where the body produces too many white and not enough red blood cells.
     
    When the mice in this study were treated with the HDAC1,2 inhibitor or the HDAC1,2/doxorubicin combination, their bone marrow started turning from pale to red, indicating the white blood cells were being replaced with red blood cells, researchers said.
     
    "We completely nailed down how the HDAC1,2 inhibitor affects DNA repair. This is so important, not just for this cancer, but any cancer that is repair-addicted. We know there is a specific type of lymphoma that is also repair-addicted," Bhaskara said.
     
    The study was published in the journal Leukemia.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Shining A Spotlight On Added Sugar: Some Ways To Reduce It In The Diet

    Shining A Spotlight On Added Sugar: Some Ways To Reduce It In The Diet
    Sugar sleuths can also be stumped by the current nutrition facts table on food products, which lists the total sugar in one item, lumping together naturally occurring and added sugars.

    Shining A Spotlight On Added Sugar: Some Ways To Reduce It In The Diet

    How To Tell If A Preschooler Needs Glasses - And How To Get The Kid To Wear Them

    How To Tell If A Preschooler Needs Glasses - And How To Get The Kid To Wear Them
    Angie Illerbrun had no idea her daughter Olivia was having trouble seeing until she had her own eyes checked and the optometrist suggested he take a look at the toddler's eyes as well.

    How To Tell If A Preschooler Needs Glasses - And How To Get The Kid To Wear Them

    Scientists Decode How X-Ray Damages DNA And Causes Cancer

    Scientists Decode How X-Ray Damages DNA And Causes Cancer
    Scientists have, for the first time, found how X-rays and radioactive particles cause cancer in humans by damaging DNA, a finding that may lead to more effective treatments for tumours caused by radiation.

    Scientists Decode How X-Ray Damages DNA And Causes Cancer

    Five Things You Should Know About How Lyme Disease Is Spread And Treated

     Blacklegged ticks become infected with Lyme disease bacteria by feeding on infected wild animals, such as deer, birds and rodents.

    Five Things You Should Know About How Lyme Disease Is Spread And Treated

    Zika Virus Can Live In Tears

    A team of researchers, including one of Indian orgin, has found that Zika virus can live in the eyes and have identified genetic material from the virus in tears of mice.

    Zika Virus Can Live In Tears

    Twins Should Be Delivered Two Weeks Early To Minimise Deaths: Scientists

    Twins Should Be Delivered Two Weeks Early To Minimise Deaths: Scientists
      It is well known that the risk of stillbirth is higher in twin pregnancies, researchers said.

    Twins Should Be Delivered Two Weeks Early To Minimise Deaths: Scientists