RNA INTERFERENCE GENETIC SCREEN SUGGESTS NEW TARGETS FOR CANCER THERAPIES

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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH 
NIH News 
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
http://www.cancer.gov/

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: Wednesday, March 29, 2006, 12:00 p.m. ET

CONTACT: NCI Media Relations Branch, 301-496-6641,
ncipressofficers@xxxxxxxxxxxx

RNA INTERFERENCE GENETIC SCREEN SUGGESTS NEW TARGETS FOR CANCER
THERAPIES

Researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI), part of the National
Institutes of Health, have developed a new method to identify genes that
keep cancer cells active and that could be potential targets of
anticancer therapies. 

The method uses RNA interference (RNAi), a technology for silencing
genes, to screen cancer cells for genes that, when silenced, cause
cancer cells to die or stop dividing. These genes are essential for the
survival of cancer cells and represent potential therapeutic targets,
but they might not contain mutations or other alterations typically
associated with the disease. 

"This method could be used to identify a new class of oncogenes beyond
the ones traditionally identified as mutated or otherwise deregulated in
cancer," said lead researcher Louis M. Staudt, M.D., Ph.D., of NCI's
Center for Cancer Research (CCR). The method is described in a study to
be published online in "Nature"* on March 29. 

"The traditional way of approaching cancer biology is to identify genes
in cancer cells altered by mutations or in their functions," explained
Staudt. "This method identifies additional genes that are not
necessarily mutated or altered but that are nonetheless required for the
cancer cell's survival. These additional genes could provide a range of
therapeutic targets beyond the small set of genes we have already
identified." 

The researchers used the method, technically called a loss-of-function
RNA interference genetic screen, to identify three genes not previously
linked to cancer.  These genes turn on a cellular process, or pathway,
that is continuously activated in a type of lymphoma cell. Lymphoma is a
cancer of the lymph nodes. The genes could become targets of therapies
for a type of lymphoma called activated B cell-like diffuse large B-cell
lymphoma (DLBCL).

"The genetic screen revealed a new mechanism in this lymphoma that we
didn't know about before," said Staudt. "More broadly, there is an
opportunity to apply this genetic screen to all types of cancer in order
to create a new classification of the disease based not on cancer type,
but on which pathways inside a cancer cell are critically required for
its proliferation or survival." 

"This type of functional classification is critical because what we need
to know most about a cancer cell is which pathways should be targeted
for any particular cancer." he continued. "We call it an Achilles heel
genetic screen because it identifies the pathways in the cancer cell
that are most vulnerable to attack." 

The screen is similar to those used to mutate and to study genes in
laboratory animals.  In this case, RNAi is employed to reduce the
activity of a specific gene in a living cancer cell, and then to see
whether the cell can survive. RNA interference alters the levels of RNA
in a cell, thereby reducing the amount of protein produced by the
targeted gene.

The technological advance made by Staudt's team was to create an on/off
switch that allowed them to activate the production of specific short
hairpin interfering RNA molecules, or shRNAs, once the genetic code for
the shRNA was delivered into a cancer cell using a modified virus. Until
now, experimentally delivering certain shRNAs into cells could kill the
cells immediately. 

"The inducible shRNA virus allowed researchers to infect a cancer cell
while shRNA production is in the off mode," explained Staudt. "When we
added drugs that induced the expression of the shRNA, and if the gene
targeted by the shRNA was essential, then the cell died." 

As a demonstration of this technique, the researchers screened 2,500
genes in two types of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma cells. Their
previous research had suggested that the NF-kB signaling pathway --
which is involved in regulating the expression of a large number of
genes -- is critical in the activated B cell-like (ABC) type, but not in
the germinal center B cell-like (GCB) type. These lymphomas have very
different survival rates and patterns of gene activity.  

"Our hypothesis was that we should find different genes that are
required for the proliferation or survival of the lymphomas because
these are very different diseases clinically," says Vu N. Ngo, Ph.D.,
also of CCR, who led the experiment. 

In the experiment, the researchers created shRNAs for 2,500 human genes.
They grew cell cultures containing the two types of lymphoma cells and
delivered a single shRNA to each cell. After a drug was added to induce
the expression of shRNAs, the researchers used DNA microarray technology
and molecular tags attached to the shRNAs to identify  genes that were
essential for cell survival and growth. 

The experiment confirmed previous research findings that genes involved
in the NF-kB signaling pathway are essential for the survival or
proliferation of ABC DLBCL cells, but not cells of the GCB type. The
screen also identified three other genes that are essential for the
survival of the ABC-type cells only.  One of these three genes is called
CARD11, and it appears to interact with two other genes, MALT1 and
BCL10, to activate a pathway required for the survival of ABC-type
lymphoma cells. 

The researchers plan to expand the screens to include cell cultures
representing all types of human lymphomas and eventually all types of
human cancers. The Achilles heel genetic screen is complementary to
NCI-led efforts to sequence human cancer genomes, said Staudt, because
identifying critical pathways in cancer cells will help focus the search
for relevant genetic mutations. 

Staudt will present findings from the study at the American Association
of Cancer Research annual meeting in Washington, D.C., on April 3, 2006.

For more information about cancer, please visit the NCI Web site at
http://www.cancer.gov, or call NCI's Cancer Information Service at
1-800-4-CANCER (1-800-422-6237).
 
-------------------------------------------
* A loss-of-function RNA interference screen for molecular targets in
cancer.
Ngo VN, Davis RE, Laurence L, Yu X, Zhao H,  Lenz G, Lloyd L, Sandeep D,
Yang L, Powell J, and Staudt LM. "Nature", online March 29, 2006.
-------------------------------------------

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This NIH News Release is available online at:
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/mar2006/nci-29.htm.

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