Novel Protein Discovery Provides Vital Clue to Cancer /
22.04.1999, 21:30
CAUTION - ADVANCE FOR AYEMS FRIDAY, APRIL 23
ADVANCE/OKLAHOMA CITY (ots-PRNewswire) - Scientists at the
Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, whose previous research on
the tumor- suppressing von Hippel-Lindau gene was hailed as a
"coup for cancer research" by the journal "Science", have now
linked their discoveries to a general mechanism for controlling
cell growth. Defects in the von Hippel-Lindau gene are associated
with most cases of clear-cell renal carcinoma, the most common
form of kidney cancer, and with von Hippel-Lindau disease, a rare
genetic condition that predisposes affected people to a variety
of cancers and to tumors of the eye, brain, spinal cord,
pancreas, liver or adrenal gland.
In two research papers published today in "Science", Drs. Joan
and Ronald Conaway of OMRF's Program in Molecular and Cell
Biology and an interdisciplinary team of scientists including
Drs. Takumi Kamura and Michael Conrad of OMRF, Drs. Wade Harper
and Stephen Elledge and their colleagues at Baylor College of
Medicine, and Dr. William Kaelin and colleagues of the Dana-
Farber Cancer Institute at Harvard Medical School, reported
discovery of a new protein, Rbx1, that is a part of the von
Hippel-Lindau, or VHL, tumor suppressor machinery. Remarkably,
Rbx1 is also found as a critical component of the machinery that
controls cell growth and division by targeting important
regulatory proteins for destruction.
"An exciting hypothesis is that, in its normal form, VHL works
together with Rbx1 to prevent the cell from accumulating proteins
that trigger uncontrolled cell proliferation. But a mutation in
the gene that produces VHL can cause cancer by interfering with
the cell's ability to destroy the trigger proteins, leading to
runaway cell growth," said Joan Conaway, Howard Hughes Medical
Institute investigator at OMRF.
Notes Ron Conaway, "Not surprisingly, the mechanisms that
regulate protein destruction are turning out to be every bit as
complicated and every bit as important as those that regulate
protein synthesis. The discovery of the link between VHL, Rbx1,
and the protein destruction machinery should help researchers
identify the specific trigger proteins targeted by VHL and may
lead to new approaches to cancer prevention and treatment."
In 1993 the Conaways discovered and isolated the Elongins as
proteins that help to control the mechanism that turns genes,
including cancer genes, on or off. In 1995 they collaborated with
Drs. Richard Klausner and Marston Linehan of the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) to demonstrate that the Elongins
function in cells with the VHL tumor suppressor protein to
prevent cancer.
"These findings represent a significant advance in our
understanding of the function of the VHL gene and how damage to
this gene leads to the manifestations in patients that we know of
as cancer," said W. Marston Linehan, M.D., Chief of the Urologic
Oncology Branch at the National Cancer Institute. "We strongly
feel that it is work such as this that will one day play a major
role in the development of effective forms of therapy for
patients with kidney cancer."
The Conaways have been involved in basic biomedical research
on gene expession since the mid-1980s, when they were at the DNAX
Research Institute and Stanford University School of Medicine. In
1997, the couple received the Amgen Award from the American
Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, a prestigious
award reserved for young investigators who have "had significant
achievements in the application of biochemistry and molecular
biology to the understanding of disease."
"Joan and Ron Conaway's young careers have been marked by
great promise resulting in major scientific contributions," said
J. Donald Capra, M.D., OMRF president. "It is also a great source
of pride that Joan Conaway is a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
investigator, one of only two in the state of Oklahoma, both of
whom are at OMRF."
The Conaways' research is supported by the Howard Hughes
Medical Institute, the National Institutes of Health, and by
funds provided to OMRF by the H.A. and Mary K. Chapman Charitable
Trust of Tulsa, OK. ots Original Text Service: Oklahoma Medical
Research Center Internet: http://www.newsaktuell.de Contact: Pam
Mauldin of Oklahoma Medical Research Center, 405-271-7159 or
email, pam-mauldin@omrf.ouhsc.edu
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