| Press Images

University of Utah scientists have engineered mice that
develop a particularly deadly childhood muscle cancer, named
alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma. The photo shows a microscopic
cross-section of such a tumor from a mouse. Normal muscle
fibers have a pink hue, and are surrounded by blue cancer
cells. Mice with such tumors will help researchers figure
out how the cancer works and eventually develop new treatments
for it.
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Credit: Cheryl M. Coffin, M.D., University of Utah |
Oct. 14, 2004 – In a pair of new studies,
University of Utah scientists took early but significant steps
to fight a particularly deadly childhood muscle cancer by identifying
some of the genetic events that cause the disease and then engineering
mice that develop the tumors. The genetic events might be targets
for new drugs that could be tested on the mice.
The disease, named alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma, “is a very
mean childhood cancer,” says study leader Mario Capecchi,
co-chair of human genetics in the university’s School of
Medicine and an investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
“Once the cancer has spread, 80 percent of the children
are likely to die within five years, even with the most aggressive
treatment possible, including chemotherapy, surgery and radiation.”
Capecchi says the studies provide evidence that the cancer may
originate in mature or nearly mature skeletal muscle fibers. That
is controversial because satellite stem cells – cells that
become new muscle – long have been suspected of giving rise
to rhabdomyosarcoma.
“If we know where it starts and the cause, you might be
able to prevent it, detect it early or develop new treatments
based on a better understanding of the biology of the tumor,”
says Charles Keller, a pediatric cancer specialist and first author
of the studies.
During the past 30 years, “there have been dramatic improvements
in cure rates for a number of cancers,” he adds. “However,
the outcome for advanced alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma has remained
largely the same for 30 years.”
Until now, scientists have been unable to breed mice with alveolar
rhabdomyosarcoma, so “we understand the initiation and progression
of this disease very poorly,” Keller says. “This work
represents a significant step forward in the understanding of
the disease, and puts us on the path toward new therapies”
less toxic to patients and better aimed at the cancer.
Keller and Capecchi believe it still will take 10 to 20 years
for new treatments to emerge. But, Keller adds, “After 30
years of limited progress, we have our foot in the door.”
The new studies will be published Nov. 1 in the journal Genes
& Development, with one of the studies published online
Oct. 15. The studies involved mice, which have a genetic makeup
quite similar to humans and thus are used as “models”
for study of human diseases.
Co-authors of the studies were University of Utah undergraduate
Mark Hansen; Cheryl Coffin, a physician in pediatric pathology;
Benjamin Arenkiel, a graduate student in human genetics; and Harvard
Medical School’s Nabeel El-Bardeesy and Ronald DePinho.
A Mutant Fusion Gene’s Role in Muscle Cancer
Childhood cancers are rare because cancer is primarily age-related.
The American Cancer Society says that out of 1.37 million new
cancers in the United States this year, 9,200 would occur in children
age 14 or younger, and 313 of those would be rhabdomyosarcomas.
The American Cancer Society says 78 percent of children with cancer
survive at least five years. But Keller says five-year survival
is a dismal 5 percent to 30 percent – depending on the group
studied – among children with alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma,
the most severe form of the disease. (Another form, embryonal
rhabdomyosarcoma, is more responsive to treatment.)
Capecchi says the cancer causes tumors in various muscles throughout
the body, primarily in the legs, arms and shoulders, but also
in the back, neck, trunk and even the tongue.
Scientists already knew that 85 to 90 percent of children with
alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma have an oncogene – a cancer-causing
gene – named Pax3:Fkhr.
It is known as a “fusion gene” because it forms when
two chromosomes each break into two pieces and then fuse or recombine.
The fusion gene includes a piece of Pax3 – which
plays a role in forming the muscles, nervous system and head –
and piece of Forkhead of Fkhr, a gene that acts
as a tumor suppressor to control cell division, which runs amok
in cancer. Researchers believe Pax3:Fkhr causes cancer
by triggering inappropriate muscle development.
Unraveling the Workings of a Cancer Gene
In their first study, the researchers probed how the Pax3:Fkhr
fusion gene affected development of the mouse embryo, muscle formation
in the embryo, and muscle growth that occurs after the mouse is
born and satellite stem cells give rise to new muscle cells.
They engineered a version of the Pax3 gene that could
be converted into a Pax3-Fkhr fusion gene at any stage
of embryo development and in any desired cells – a new technology
called “conditional mutagenesis.” Capecchi says these
experiments revealed how the fusion gene turns various genes on
or off, interfering with normal muscle development and providing
clues to the complex series of steps by which the gene causes
alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma.
“If you know the steps involved, then you can look at each
of them and ask, ‘Are there drugs that would specifically
interfere with that step,’” he adds.
Keller says muscles are made two ways. As an embryo grows, muscles
develop from cells known as somites, which also give rise to bone
and skin. Just before birth, muscle starts being made a second
way: Muscles made earlier gain added mass because of satellite
cells, which are stem cells destined to make muscle.
Rhabdomyosarcomas long were thought to arise in satellite stem
cells. Yet when the researchers activated the cancer-causing Pax3:Fkhr
gene in mouse muscle satellite stem cells, the embryos didn’t
develop tumors. That makes satellite cells an unlikely source
of the cancer.
Scientists who reviewed the paper argued the cancer could still
originate in rare subtypes of muscle stem cells. Keller and Capecchi
plan to test those cells. But Keller says that when the Pax3:Fkhr
fusion gene was turned on in tens of thousands of satellite stem
cells, those cells didn’t become cancerous, so it seems
likely the gene must cause cancer by becoming active in some other
type of cell.
In the second study’s key finding, mice developed muscle
tumors much like the human cancer when Capecchi and Keller did
two things. First, they activated the Pax3:Fkhr cancer
gene in mature or nearly mature muscle fibers either late in development
of mouse embryos or after the mice were born. Second, they inactivated
either one of two tumor-suppressor genes – named Trp53
(or p53) and Ink4a/ARF – that normally
control cell division.
Recent experiments show nearly all the mice develop muscle cancer
when the scientists activate the Pax3:Fkhr cancer gene
and deactivate either tumor suppressor gene, Keller says.
Mice previously have been created to develop the less deadly embryonal
rhabdomyosarcoma muscle cancer, and a rare type, known as pleomorphic
rhabdomyosarcoma, but until now, no mouse had developed the highly
lethal alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma.
Capecchi says cancer specialists have believed alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma
originates in satellite stem cells because the tumors proliferate
after birth, when stem cells retain their ability to proliferate
but mature muscle fibers normally do not. Also, a number of cancers
involve stem cells. So “it’s a big deal for a [mature
or nearly mature muscle] cell not be proliferating and then all
of a sudden to be able to proliferate” to form tumors, Capecchi
adds.
Keller says other researchers previously found that maturing skeletal
muscle cells grown in the laboratory can revert to muscle stem
cells. The Utah research found that tumors arising from mature
or nearly mature muscle in mice have some characteristics of stem
cells. That suggests the “primitive-appearing [rhabdomyosarcoma]
tumors may be the result of non-primitive [muscle] cells reverting
to a primitive state,” Keller says.
Mice with rhabdomyosarcoma now can be studied to determine how
the cancer arises from mature or nearly mature muscle fibers,
and also whether the Pax3:Fkhr fusion gene is required
to maintain the cancer or just to get it started.
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