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Mengapa gajah jarang mendapatkan kanker
Potensi mekanisme diidentifikasi yang mungkin menjadi kunci untuk resistensi kanker
Date:
October 8, 2015
Source:
University of Utah Health Sciences
Summary:
Sebuah studi baru bisa menjelaskan mengapa gajah jarang mendapatkan kanker . Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa gajah memiliki salinan tambahan dari gen yang mengkode penekan tumor , p53 . Selanjutnya , gajah mungkin memiliki mekanisme yang lebih kuat untuk membunuh sel-sel yang rusak yang berisiko menjadi kanker . Temuan menunjukkan tambahan p53 bisa menjelaskan peningkatan resistensi kanker pada gajah ' .
................ Menurut hasil yang dipublikasikan dalam Journal of American Medical Association ( JAMA ) , dan ditentukan selama beberapa tahun serta kolaborasi unik antara HCI , hospital Anak Primer , Hogle Zoo Utah , dan Ringling Bros , pusat untuk Konservasi gajah , gajah memiliki 38 salinan dimodifikasi tambahan ( alel ) dari gen yang mengkode p53 , penekan tumor yang terdefinisi dengan baik , dibandingkan dengan manusia , yang hanya memiliki dua .....more
Why elephants
rarely get cancer
Potential mechanism identified that may be key to cancer resistance
Date:
October 8, 2015
Source:
University of Utah Health Sciences
Summary:
A new study could explain why elephants rarely get cancer. The results show
that elephants have extra copies of a gene encoding a tumor suppressor, p53.
Further, elephants may have a more robust mechanism for killing damaged cells
at risk for becoming cancerous. The findings suggest extra p53 could explain
elephants' enhanced cancer resistance.
.......................
Why elephants rarely get cancer is a mystery that has stumped scientists
for decades. A study led by researchers at Huntsman Cancer Institute (HCI) at
the University of Utah and Arizona State University, and including researchers
from the Ringling Bros. Center for Elephant Conservation, may have found the
answer.
According to the results, published in the Journal of the American
Medical Association (JAMA), and determined over the course of several years
and a unique collaboration between HCI, Primary Children's Hospital, Utah's
Hogle Zoo, and the Ringling Bros. Center for Elephant Conservation, elephants
have 38 additional modified copies (alleles) of a gene that encodes p53, a
well-defined tumor suppressor, as compared to humans, who have only two.
Further, elephants may have a more robust mechanism for killing damaged cells
that are at risk for becoming cancerous. In isolated elephant cells, this
activity is doubled compared to healthy human cells, and five times that of cells
from patients with Li-Fraumeni Syndrome, who have only one working copy of p53
and more than a 90 percent lifetime cancer risk in children and adults. The
results suggest extra p53 could explain elephants' enhanced resistance to
cancer.
"Nature has already figured out how to prevent cancer. It's up to us
to learn how different animals tackle the problem so we can adapt those
strategies to prevent cancer in people," says co-senior author Joshua
Schiffman, M.D., pediatric oncologist at Huntsman Cancer Institute, University
of Utah School of Medicine, and Primary Children's Hospital.
According to Schiffman, elephants have long been considered a walking
conundrum. Because they have 100 times as many cells as people, they should be
100 times more likely to have a cell slip into a cancerous state and trigger
the disease over their long life span of 50 to 70 years. And yet it's believed
that elephants get cancer less often, a theory confirmed in this study.
Analysis of a large database of elephant deaths estimates a cancer mortality
rate of less than 5 percent compared to 11 to 25 percent in people.
In search of an explanation, the scientists combed through the African
elephant genome and found at least 40 copies of genes that code for p53, a
protein well known for its cancer-inhibiting properties. DNA analysis provides
clues as to why elephants have so many copies, a substantial increase over the
two found in humans. The vast majority, 38 of them, are so-called retrogenes,
modified duplicates that have been churned out over evolutionary time.
Schiffman's team collaborated with Utah's Hogle Zoo and Ringling Bros.
Center for Elephant Conservation to test whether the extra gene copies may
protect elephants from cancer. They extracted white blood cells from blood drawn
from the animals during routine wellness checks and subjected the cells to
treatments that damage DNA, a cancer trigger. In response, the cells reacted to
damage with a characteristic p53-mediated response: they committed suicide.
"It's as if the elephants said, 'It's so important that we don't get
cancer, we're going to kill this cell and start over fresh,'" says
Schiffman. "If you kill the damaged cell, it's gone, and it can't turn
into cancer. This may be more effective of an approach to cancer prevention
than trying to stop a mutated cell from dividing and not being able to
completely repair itself."
With respect to cancer, patients with inherited Li-Fraumeni Syndrome are
nearly the opposite of elephants. They have just one active copy of p53 and
more than a 90 percent lifetime risk for cancer. Less p53 decreases the DNA
damage response in patients with Li-Fraumeni Syndrome, and Schiffman's team
wondered if more p53 could protect against cancer in elephants by heightening
the response to damage. To test this, the researchers did a side-by-side
comparison with cells isolated from elephants (n=8), healthy humans (n=10), and
from patients with Li-Fraumeni Syndrome (n=10). They found that elephant cells
exposed to radiation self-destruct at twice the rate of healthy human cells and
more than five times the rate of Li-Fraumeni cells (14.6%, 7.2%, and 2.7%,
respectively). These findings support the idea that more p53 offers additional
protection against cancer.
"By all logical reasoning, elephants should be developing a tremendous
amount of cancer, and in fact, should be extinct by now due to such a high risk
for cancer," says Schiffman. "We think that making more p53 is
nature's way of keeping this species alive." Additional studies will be
needed to determine whether p53 directly protects elephants from cancer.
"Twenty years ago, we founded the Ringling Bros. Center for Elephant
Conservation to preserve the endangered Asian elephant for future generations.
Little did we know then that they may hold the key to cancer treatment,"
said Kenneth Feld, Chairman and CEO of Feld Entertainment.
"The incredible bond our staff has with these majestic animals, and
the hands-on care provided at the Center for Elephant Conservation, allows us
to easily provide the blood samples Dr. Schiffman needs to further his
research," said Alana Feld, executive vice president of Feld Entertainment
and producer of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey. "We look forward
to the day when there is a world with more elephants and less cancer."
The elephant story represents one way that evolution may have overcome
cancer. Other evidence suggests that naked mole rats and bowhead whales have
evolved different approaches to the problem. Schiffman plans to use what he's
learned in elephants as a strategy for developing novel cancer-fighting
therapies.
Schiffman and co-authors, Lisa Abegglen, Ashley Chan, Kristy Lee, Rosann
Robinson, Michael Campbell, and Srividya Bhaskara are from Huntsman Cancer
Institute and the University of Utah, Aleah Caulin and Shane Jensen are from
the University of Pennsylvania, Wendy Kiso and Dennis Schmitt are from the
Ringling Bros. Center for Elephant Conservation, Peter Waddell is from the
Ronin Institute in West Lafayette, Indiana, and Carlo Maley, senior co-author,
is from Arizona State University. Also contributing to the research was Eric
Peterson, elephant manager at Utah's Hogle Zoo.
"Participating in the research is not only amazing but a win-win for
humans and elephants," said Peterson. "If elephants can hold the key
to unlocking some of the mysteries of cancer, then we will see an increased
awareness of the plight of elephants worldwide. What a fantastic benefit:
elephants and humans living longer, better lives."
"The animal kingdom undoubtedly holds information that could help lead
to cures for many human illnesses," said Craig Dinsmore, executive
director, Utah's Hogle Zoo. "The blood samples from our elephants at
Utah's Hogle Zoo are aiding Dr. Schiffman in his research, and we are proud to
be a part of his ground-breaking work."
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from materials provided byUniversity of Utah Health Sciences. Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
1. Joshua D. Schiffman, MD et al. Potential mechanisms for cancer
resistance in elephants and comparative cellular response to DNA damage in
humans. JAMA, October 2015 DOI: 10.1001/jama.2015.13134