Not too promising but a new pathway is certainly revealed. At least it may be helpful.
Statins are deemed controversial and for many dosage can be a problem. Muscle ache is no freind.
At least this drug now has a paralel application that readily keeps it on the shelf..
Cell studies suggest statins starve cancer of nutrients
March 12, 2020
A new study suggests that statins might be effective against some types of cancer
View 1 Images
https://newatlas.com/medical/statins-starve-cancer-nutrients/
Statin drugs
are commonly taken to help manage cholesterol levels, and they have a
good track record of preventing heart attacks and strokes in at-risk
patients. But now, researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine have found that
they may also kill some cancer cells by starving them of nutrients, and
uncovered the mechanism for how that can happen.
In
experiments in lab cultures of engineered cells, the researchers found
that statins were effective against cancer cells that had a mutation in a
gene called PTEN. One type of statin in particular, called
pitavastatin, managed to kill almost all of the cancerous cells without
affecting many of the healthy human cells around them.
The
researchers didn’t set out to specifically test for statins’ effects on
cancer – they were working the other way around. The team was running
through an FDA database of 2,500 drugs to see which ones might work
against cancer, and statins emerged as one of the most effective.
Next,
the researchers investigated how the statins were working. One of the
known effects of the drugs is that they block production of a molecule
called geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate (GGPP) – and, it turns out, this
molecule may be vital for cancer cells to survive.
To
test it, the team added both GGPP and pitavastatin to PTEN-mutated
cancer cells, and they largely survived the onslaught. When the
researchers then engineered cancer cells without an enzyme that produces
GGPP, they didn’t last long without dying.
Interestingly, the
team noticed that the cells stopped moving as they died, suggesting they
weren’t getting enough energy from their surroundings. To test this
idea, the researchers then added fluorescent tags to proteins that cells
often consume for energy, and then placed these proteins in the
environment around both healthy human cells and cancerous cells.
Sure
enough, the cancer cells didn’t start glowing. That indicates they
weren’t consuming many of the proteins, telling the team that statins
work by starving cancer of nutrients. By contrast, the healthy cells
began to glow brightly, indicating that the statins weren’t preventing
them from feeding.
As
intriguing as the study is so far, it’s only been conducted on cells in
culture, and the effects may not translate as well to use in the human
body. That’s the focus of the next phase of research, according to the
team.
The study was published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Source: Johns Hopkins Medicine
No comments:
Post a Comment