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Yale Cancer Center Study Finds Low Oxygen Environment Helps Tumors Silence Critical Genes

July 18, 2014

Contact: Vicky Agnew
Vicky.agnew@yale.edu
203-785-7001 or 843-697-6208 (m)

July 18, 2014, New Haven, CT – A study led by Yale Cancer Center may provide clues to how some aggressive cancers turn off, or silence, genes critical to suppressing tumors. The findings, published Thursday in the journal Cell Reports, suggest that this gene silencing process could be interrupted to increase the chances that aggressive tumors will respond to treatment.

As cancer develops, it often outstrips its blood supply and receives less oxygen than normal tissue. This low-oxygen environment, called hypoxia, is associated with aggressive tumors of all types that are more likely to resist chemotherapy and radiation therapy and progress. The study, which used colon cancer tissue, found that hypoxia also triggers the silencing of a critical tumor-suppressing gene called MLH1, according to Peter M. Glazer, MD, PhD, the Robert H. Hunter Professor and chairman of therapeutic radiology, and professor of genetics at Yale.

The team also identified an enzyme, LSD1 (lysine specific demethylase), associated with MLH1 that could be a target to reverse or block the silencing process. Since LSDI is an enzyme, it is possible to target it with small molecules to inhibit its activity.

“We’ve long known that hypoxic tumors are associated with worse prognoses, but the idea that hypoxic tumors could silence genes was an unexpected finding,” Glazer said. “Now that we know how big a role hypoxia plays, we have a new and clinically-relevant path to explore in terms of circumventing this process. The next step is to determine how hypoxia affects other tumor-suppressing genes.”

Other authors on the study were Yuhong Lu, PhD, of Yale University ; Narendra Wajapeyee, PhD, of Yale University; and Mitchell S. Turker, PhD, Oregon Health & Science University.

Submitted by Emily Montemerlo on July 18, 2014