WORLD / CROSS-BORDERS
Study finds cancer-boosting culprit that multiplies with age
Published: Aug 20, 2020 06:38 PM
As our bodies convert food into energy, they produce debris that accumulates as we age. New research shows that one of these metabolic throwaways plays a potentially deadly role in the development of cancer.

Mohammed Shan-e-alam, a 25-year-old cancer patient from Rampur in Uttar Pradesh state, rests on a bed in a night shelter set up by Delhi Government outside the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) during a government-imposed nationwide lockdown as a preventive measure against COVID-19, in New Delhi, India on April 7. Photo: AFP

The finding adds to a body of knowledge about the ways in which the aging process accelerates our chances of developing deadly cancers, but also offers potential avenues for blocking metastasizing tumors.

The study, published Wednesday in the Journal Nature, grew from work on metastasis, the process by which cancer cells detach from an initial tumor and form new tumors elsewhere in the body.

Observations of metastasizing cells revealed something intriguing - a high level of something called methylmalonic acid (MMA), a metabolic by-product that appears to accumulate as we get older. 

To examine whether MMA might play a role in metastasis, the scientists examined how lung and breast cancer tumor cells behaved when exposed to blood samples taken from people aged 30 and younger, or 60 and older. 

In 25 of the 30 blood samples from younger donors, the cancer cells displayed no change, but in 25 of the 30 older blood samples, the cells started to display different characteristics.

They developed increased "migratory and invasive capacity," as well as resistance to two drugs often used to treat cancers, the study found.

When the cells were injected into mice, they produced metastatic tumors in the lungs.

So how does MMA induce these changes in cancer cells? The key seems to be in a sort of reprogramming that "switches on" a gene called SOX4. 

Prior research has shown SOX4 encourages cancer cells to become more aggressive and prone to metastasis. To test whether it was indeed SOX4 that was altering the qualities of the cancer cells, the team blocked expression of the gene, and found that MMA is not of the same effect.

Blocking SOX4 stopped the process by which the cancer cells were able to resist two cancer treatments. 

"This discovery is the beginning of many investigations in many different directions," said John Blenis, a professor of pharmacology at Weill Cornell Medicine, who led the research.

"But our hope overall is that we'll be able eventually to develop therapies to reduce MMA levels and thereby reduce cancer mortality," Blenis said in a statement issued by Weill Cornell Medicine.