New research out of MIT has made great strides into discovering the fundamental mechanisms behind this form of brain tumor. They have now found the reasons behind why glioblastomas grow so aggressively.
Utilizing mouse models, the team was able to block the mechanism that made glioblastomas aggressive, halting tumor growth. They were also able to identify genetic markers that could predict which patients would benefit from this type of treatment.
Advancing the field of brain tumor treatment
Currently, medical treatment for brain tumors depends on the type, size, grade, and location of cancer. Your age, as well as overall health, play an important role. Therapy is currently limited to drugs that attempt to shrink tumor size as well as radiation, chemo, and surgery options.
“There are very few specific or targeted inhibitors that are used in the treatment of brain cancer. There’s really a dire need for new therapies and new ideas,” says Michael Hemann, an associate professor of biology at MIT, a member of MIT’s Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, and a senior author of the study.
The problem with many of the currently proposed treatments for glioblastoma is that they don’t cross the blood-brain-barrier—a high-density group of cells restricting passage of substances from the bloodstream to the brain. This is a limitation that many newly proposed treatments have to overcome.
The identification of a protein called PRMT5 involved in glioblastomas is the focus of this particular study. When the gene was turned off, tumor cells stopped growing. However, the protein was involved in hundreds of other processes and stopping only tumor growth proved quite a challenge.
However, further experiments on this gene led the researchers to hypothesize that PRMT5 was using special types of gene splicing to stimulate tumor growth, a process that “snipped out” unneeded portions of mRNA molecules called introns.
PRMT5 played a key role in the splicing, which essentially guaranteed the expression and proliferation of tumor cells, ultimately helping the cells grow uncontrollably.
A possible new method for treatment
Blocking PRMT5 in tumor cells had successfully stopped tumor cell division and made them go dormant into a non-dividing state when testing on glioblastoma cells transplanted under the skin of mice. However, the issue of passing the blood-brain barrier still remains, as PRMT5 inhibitors did not work as well when targeting tumors in the brain, the researchers found.
A major benefit, however, was the fact that PRMT5 did not appear to cause major side effects, as is the case with commonly used conventional treatment options.
The advancements made in the roles PRMT5 plays in brain tumor development helps to shed light on this promising aspect of cancer treatment, but more research will still be needed to overcome its limitations in targeting cancer in the brain.
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