Aggressive
cancer treated successfully in mice
White blood cells from a strain of cancer-resistant mice
cured advanced cancers in ordinary laboratory mice,
researchers at Wake Forest University School of Medicine
reported.
"Even highly aggressive forms of malignancy with extremely
large tumors were eradicated," Zheng Cui, M.D., Ph.D., and
colleagues reported in this week's on-line edition of
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The transplanted white blood cells not only killed existing
cancers, but also protected normal mice from what should
have been lethal doses of highly aggressive new cancers.
"This is the very first time that this exceptionally
aggressive type of cancer was treated successfully," said
Cui. "Never before has this been done with any other
therapy."
The original studies on the cancer-resistant mice - reported
in 2003 - showed that such resistance could be inherited,
which had implications for inheritance of resistance in
humans, said Mark C. Willingham, M.D., a pathologist and
co-investigator. "This study shows that you can use this
resistant-cell therapy in mice and that the therapy works.
The next step is to understand the exact way in which it
works, and perhaps eventually design such a therapy for
humans."
The cancer-resistant mice all stem from a single mouse
discovered in 1999. "The cancer resistance trait so far has
been passed to more than 2,000 descendants in 14
generations," said Cui, associate professor of pathology. It
also has been bred into three additional mouse strains.
About 40 percent of each generation inherits the protection
from cancer.
The original group of cancer-resistant mice, also described
in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
successfully fought off a range of virulent transplanted
cancers.
"Now we know that we can take white blood cells from this
strange mouse and put them into a normal mouse and these
cells will still kill cancers," said Willingham, professor
of pathology and head of the Section on Tumor Biology. "This
is therapy in a mouse that does not have this magical
genetic inheritance."
The transplanted white blood cells included natural killer
cells, and other white blood cells called neutrophils and
macrophages that are part of the body's "innate immune
system." This system forms a first line of host defense
against pathogens, such as bacteria.
"Their activation requires no prior exposure, but rather
depends on a pre-determined mechanism to recognize specific
patterns on the cancer cell surface," the researchers said.
Moreover, preliminary studies show that the white blood
cells also kill "endogenous" cancers - cancers that spring
up naturally in the body's own cells.
Cui and Willingham said the research produced many other
surprises. For one thing, if a virulent tumor was planted in
a normal mouse's back, and the transplanted white blood
cells were injected into the mouse's abdomen, the cells
still found the cancer without harming normal cells. The
kind of cancer didn't seem to matter.
A
single injection of cancer-resistant macrophages offered
long-term protection for the entire lifespan of the
recipient mouse, something very unexpected, they said.
"The potency and selectivity for cancer cells are so high
that, if we learned the mechanism, it would give us hope
that this would work in humans," said Cui. "This would
suggest that cancer cells send out a signal, but normal
white blood cells can't find them."
Cui said the findings "suggest a cancer-host relationship
that may point in a new therapeutic direction in which
adverse side effects of treatment are minimal."
The next steps include understanding the molecular
mechanism. "The real key is finding the mutation, which is
an ongoing investigation in collaboration with several other
laboratories," said Willingham.
Cui, Willingham and their colleagues also showed that highly
purified natural killer cells, macrophages and neutrophils
taken from the cancer-resistant mice killed many different
types of cancer cells in laboratory studies in test tubes.
Besides Cui and Willingham, the team includes Amy M. Hicks,
Ph.D., Anne M. Sanders, B.S., Holly M. Weir, M.S., Wei Du,
M.D., and Joseph Kim, B.A., from pathology, Greg Riedlinger,
B.S., from cancer biology, Martha A. Alexander-Miller,
Ph.D., from microbiology and immunology, Mark J. Pettenati,
Ph.D., and C. Von Kap-Herr, M. Sc., from medical genetics,
and Andrew J.G. Simpson, Ph.D., and Lloyd J. Old, M.D., of
the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research in New York.