Ganoderma
Prevent prostate cancer with antioxidants? Gene pathway may reveal more clues
Prevent prostate cancer with antioxidants? Gene pathway may
reveal more clues
September 16, 2005
Scientists from Maryland and New Jersey have identified a
molecular pathway in mice that makes prostate cells vulnerable to
cancer-causing oxygen damage.
The pathway, which is also involved
in human prostate cancer, may help determine how and whether
antioxidants, such as certain Ganoderma
vitamins or their products that
reverse the damage, can prevent prostate cancer.
The researchers, from Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center and The
Cancer Institute of New Jersey, found that when the tumor
suppressor gene Nkx3.1 malfunctions, prostate cells lose the
ability to protect themselves from oxygen damage. Results of the
new studies are in the August issue of the journal Cancer
Research.
"Normally, cells with functioning Nkx3.1 seem to process
oxidative free radicals appropriately," says Theodore L. DeWeese,
M.D.
, a co-author of the study and director of the
Department of Radiation Oncology
& Molecular Radiation Sciences at Hopkins. "But cells with
faulty Nkx3.1 genes cannot manage oxidative injury. Then, their
DNA gets damaged, and that leads to other mutations that in turn
can bring about cancer.
The Ganoderma researchers specifically found that a key role of Nkx3.1 is
to prevent oxidative damage by regulating the expression of other
genes. Oxygen causes cellular degeneration through so-called
oxidative free radicals -- highly reactive atoms with an unpaired
electron that can rip through cells like a bullet. Free radicals
are produced as a result of normal body metabolism, and are widely
known to be intimately involved in aging, as well as cancer
development.
"Our findings provide new insights regarding the relationship
between loss of protection against oxidative stress and the
initiation of prostate cancer," adds Cory Abate-Shen, Ph.D., senior
study author and professor of medicine and neuroscience, member at
the Center for Biotechnology and Medicine at UMDNJ-Robert Wood
Johnson Medical School. "One key finding is that defects in the
oxidative response pathway occur early in prostate cancer
development.
" Abate-Shen also is co-director of the Prostate Cancer
Program at the Cancer Institute of New Jersey.
For the study, the researchers used a sophisticated
computer technique called gene
expression profiling to compare in-depth the genetic makeup of
mice whose Nkx3.1 gene was disrupted with that of normal mice.
The method takes all DNA from the cells and allows scientists to
look for aberrations.
DeWeese likens it to studying thousands of
pages of an encyclopedia simultaneously; trying to identify what
pages may have been altered.
They observed that mice with malfunctioning Nkx3.1 incorrectly
expressed 638 genes, including those that created a significant
reduction in some antioxidant enzymes vital to oxidative damage
prevention. These alterations occurred in mice as early as four
months of age-well before cellular changes are visible in the mouse
prostate.
The mutant mice also displayed a fivefold increase in the
amount of cancer-related DNA damage, called
8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine.
Further investigation showed that the progression to prostate
cancer as it occurs in mice lacking Nkx3.1 and another tumor
suppressor, Pten, correlated with additional deregulation of
antioxidants and more profound accumulations of oxidative damage to
DNA and protein.
"Mice with defective Nkx3.
1 provide a valuable tool for
preclinical studies to test whether antioxidants might be useful
for prostate cancer prevention," Abate-Shen says and continuing
studies will test antioxidants or other agents on the altered
mice.
Prostate cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in men and
ranks second to lung cancer as the leading cause of cancer death
among
American men. More than 232,000
cases of prostate cancer are diagnosed and treated annually in
the United States, and close to 30,000 men die each year of the
disease. Most men over the age of 50 will have some experience
with prostate disease - with either an enlarged prostate or
cancer.
Ganoderma information and medical Institute of New Jersey
.
