News Release

Screening drugs to kill cancer cells in their safe spaces

Peer-Reviewed Publication

JCI Journals

Existing chemotherapy approaches treat cancer by targeting cells that are actively multiplying and have a high metabolic rate. However, cancer stem cells can escape this targeting, leading to chemotherapy-resistant cancer and disease relapse. Researchers suspect that the microenvironment in which some cancer stem cells develop may give them protection from chemotherapy treatments. In research described this week in the JCI, a team of researchers led by Trang Hoang at the University of Montreal determined that pre-leukemic stem cells were less sensitive to current chemotherapy drugs. The team then developed a powerful screening method to identify drugs that more effectively target and kill these pre-cancerous cells. They determined that pre-leukemic stem cells were dependent upon specific features in the bone marrow environment for survival. By mimicking these features in a drug screening assay, the researchers were able to identify a compound called 2-methyoxyestradiol that reduced survival of pre-leukemic cells without affecting normal cells. Treatment with 2-methyoxyestradiol also reduced the development of leukemia in a mouse model. The use of this and similar stem cell-targeted screening assays may lead to identification of novel approaches for treating chemotherapy-resistant and relapsed cancer.

###

TITLE: High-throughput screening in niche-based assay identifies compounds to target preleukemic stem cells

AUTHOR CONTACT:

Trang Hoang
Institute of Research in Immunology and Cancer - University of Montreal
trang.hoang@umontreal.ca

View this article at: http://www.jci.org/articles/view/86489?key=c884d6b5f99b3e1f6fe1


Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.