How support protein laminin plays a role in breast cancer development
March 8th, 2011 - 5:38 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Mar 8 (ANI): A new study has found how a structural support protein called laminin plays a central role in the development of breast cancer.
Mina Bissell with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and her collaborators focused on laminin and its connections with two other proteins - actin, a cytoplasmic protein that has been linked to nuclear activities; and MMP9, an enzyme that is secreted outside the cells and is known to break down ECM (extracellular matrix) constituents.
“Quiescence” is the process by which a biological cell stops growing or dividing, opposite to cancer.
The team has shown that the addition of laminin-111 leads to quiescence in breast epithelial cells through changes in nuclear actin.
“We found that high levels of laminin-111 depleted nuclear actin and this in turn induced cell quiescence,” Bissell says.
“Furthermore, this process can be prevented if a form of actin that can not exit the nucleus is introduced. Under these conditions the cells do not stop growing even in the presence of laminin.”
“However, just giving laminin back to cancer cells was not enough to make them normal so other factors are clearly also involved and one such factor we now know is how laminin-111 and nuclear actin talk to each other!”
The researchers believe that the interaction between laminin-111 and nuclear actin could provide a new target for diagnostic therapeutic efforts, but this will require further study.
This study appears in the Journal of Cell Science. (ANI)
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