{"id":16814,"date":"2021-05-17T17:01:28","date_gmt":"2021-05-17T15:01:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/idibell.cat\/en\/?p=16814"},"modified":"2021-05-17T17:01:28","modified_gmt":"2021-05-17T15:01:28","slug":"a-connection-between-senescence-and-stem-cells-caused-by-a-breast-cancer-initiating-protein","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/idibell.cat\/en\/2021\/05\/a-connection-between-senescence-and-stem-cells-caused-by-a-breast-cancer-initiating-protein\/","title":{"rendered":"A connection between senescence and stem cells caused by a breast cancer-initiating protein"},"content":{"rendered":"
Early diagnosis and improvement of breast cancer treatments have reduced breast cancer mortality in recent years, with survival rates reaching 85% today. In spite of these data, breast cancer was still the most frequently diagnosed tumour in the world in 2020, mainly due to increased population screening and social factors such as ageing. RANK protein<\/strong> plays a key role in the development of these tumours. Located in the membrane of cells, when it binds to its partner<\/em> RANKL, it sends signals that stimulate the development of the mammary gland. When these proteins do not work properly, breast cells begin to divide and multiply uncontrollably, resulting in breast cancer.<\/p>\n Researchers from the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO<\/a>) and the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBELL<\/a>), led by Eva Gonz\u00e1lez-Su\u00e1rez<\/strong>, have found that the hyperactivation of the RANK pathway plays a double function in breast cells: in the early stages of cancer, it activates senescence, which has a protective effect and delays the appearance of tumours; in more advanced stages, RANK-induced senescence favours the accumulation of stem cells in the breast tissue, which promotes tumour growth and increased aggressiveness. The results of the work are published this week in the journal Developmental Cell<\/em><\/a>.<\/p>\n The authors describe throughout the paper how this double activation of senescence and tumour stem cells occurs in response to high RANK levels, using mice that produced large amounts of this protein in the epithelial cells of breast tissue. \u201cWe observe that high levels of RANK protein induce senescence and at the same time an accumulation of stem cells, which in principle seems contradictory, but is not<\/em>,\u201d explains Gonz\u00e1lez-Su\u00e1rez<\/strong>.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n RANK proteins have been linked to bone tissue remodelling, and blocking these proteins by means of inhibitors such as denosumab antibodies has been shown to be effective in the treatment of bone-related pathologies such as osteoporosis and bone metastases.<\/p>\n These proteins also participate in the development of the mammary gland<\/strong>, which occurs mainly in women during puberty, pregnancy and the menstrual cycle in response to sex hormones. When these proteins do not work properly, breast cells begin to divide and multiply uncontrollably. \u201cIn this paper, we have detected abnormally high levels of RANK in pre-neoplastic lesions in patients with breast cancer<\/em>,\u201d the researchers report. How does RANK act on epithelial cells in the mammary glands to promote cancer?<\/p>\n In 2010, Gonz\u00e1lez-Su\u00e1rez first described the key role of this protein in the development of breast cancer and proposed that drug inhibition <\/strong>by means of RANKL inhibitors could prevent breast cancer. Over the course of a few years, \u201cwe demonstrated its therapeutic potential for the treatment of breast tumours by reducing recurrence and metastases, both because of its role in tumour cells and because of a reactivation of the anti-tumour immune response<\/em>,\u201d the researcher said.<\/p>\n <\/p>\nRANK protein, from bone formation to cancer<\/h3>\n
A protective mechanism that becomes harmful<\/h3>\n