Genetic insights may explain retinal growth, eye cancer
ArabMedicare.com News) Investigators at St. Jude
Children's Research Hospital have discovered the role of
several key genes in the development of the retina, and
in the process have taken a significant step toward
understanding how to prevent or cure the potentially
deadly eye cancer retinoblastoma. Retinoblastoma is the
third most common cancer in infants after leukemia and
neuroblastoma (nerve cancer). Retinoblastoma that has
spread outside the eye is among the deadliest childhood
cancers, with an average survival rate of less than 10
percent.
A key finding of the new study is that humans are more
susceptible to developing retinoblastoma than mice,
because mice can compensate for the loss of a gene
critical to normal retinal development while humans
cannot. The results of the study appear in the
open-access journal BMC Biology.
"Our study gives us important new information on the
normal development of the retina and suggests new
studies that could lead to the design of more effective
drugs to treat retinoblastoma," said Michael Dyer,
Ph.D., an associate member of the Department of
Developmental Neurobiology at St. Jude and senior author
of the paper.
The researchers discovered that during the development
of the retina in mice, three genes that belong to the Rb
gene family are expressed at different times.
Specifically, the p107 gene is active before birth in
cells that are going to become the retina. This gene
ensures that the retinal cells stop multiplying at the
proper time during development of this tissue. The Rb
gene is expressed after birth in those cells that are
actively multiplying as they also help form the retina.
In addition, the St. Jude team found that when Rb was
inactivated during development of the mouse retina, the
two p107 gene copies were up-regulated-made more
active-therefore compensating for this loss of Rb
activity. Importantly, this compensation required the
presence of both p107 genes. In turn, when p107 was
inactivated, Rb activity was upregulated; but unlike
with p107, this compensation required only one copy of
Rb.
The St. Jude team proposes that the ability of Rb and
p107 to compensate for the absence of each other in mice
prevents the developing retinal cells from multiplying
uncontrollably and causing retinoblastoma. Also, the
expression of both Rb and p130 might prevent this cancer
in mice.
However, researchers learned that conditions in humans
are not the same as in mice. They found that the primary
Rb gene family member active in the developing human
retina is RB1, and unlike in the mouse, little p107 is
expressed in the developing human retina. In addition,
p107 is not up-regulated to compensate for a loss of RB1
activity.
"This could explain why humans are susceptible to
retinoblastoma following RB1 gene mutations, while mice
require inactivation of both Rb and p107, or both Rb and
p130," said Dyer.
The discovery by the St. Jude team that p107 is not
expressed during development of the retina in humans
suggests that it might be possible in the future to
prevent retinoblastoma by "turning on" that gene, Dyer
noted.
"Because the eye is visible to researchers studying
retinoblastoma, it's possible to watch a tumor grow from
a single cell," said Stacy Donovan, Ph.D., a
postdoctoral fellow in Dyer's laboratory. "This could
tell us which type of cell in the developing eye causes
this cancer."
"Knowing which cell causes retinoblastoma would give
researchers a specific target for a novel retinoblastoma
drug," added Brett Schweers, Ph.D. a postdoctoral fellow
in Dyer's laboratory at St. Jude. "The biochemical
pathway driving the multiplication of a cancer cell of
origin would differ, depending on whether it was a
progenitor cell or one of the more specialized cells. So
it would be important to know which type of cell is
giving rise to the tumor. That way you could design a
drug to knock out the pathway driving the abnormal
growth in that particular cell."
Donovan and Schweers are the first and second authors
respectively of the paper and contributed equally to the
work.
Dyer's team previously developed the first reliable
mouse models of retinoblastoma that could be used to
test new drug therapies for this tumor:
http://www.stjude.org/media/0,2561,453_5485_11388,00.html.
Subsequently, the team used these models to demonstrate
that a combination of topotecan and carboplatin were
superior to the current treatment being used to treat
retinoblastoma:
http://www.stjude.org/developmental-neurobiology/0,2522,414_2041_19593,00.html.
Other authors of the paper include Rodrigo Martins of
St. Jude and Dianna Johnson (University of Tennessee).
This work was supported in part by the National
Institutes of Health, Cancer Center Support from the
National Cancer Institute, the American Cancer Society,
ALSAC, the Pearle Vision Foundation and Research to
Prevent Blindness