New Ideas on the Progression of Cancer
High mutation rates in cancer cells can be caused by non-DNA damaging stresses
Friday, January 19, 2001
Duke University Medical Center researchers report for the first
time that long-term genetic instability in cancer cells can be
induced both by stresses that break DNA and those thought not to
damage genetic material.
The stress-induced persistent genetic instability they have
described is likely to play an important role in carcinogenesis -
in the progression of cancer even if not in the initiation of it,
the researchers said. The results also might help explain the large
number of mutations seen in cancer cells, they added.
If other stresses, such as chemotherapy drugs or steroids, are
eventually shown to cause similar effects, the results could upset
the prevailing view of the mechanism behind cancers developing
resistance to therapy or becoming more aggressive, the scientists
said.
"In general, it was thought that if a cell suffers a mutation and
survives, the mutation is fixed within one or two generations,"
said lead author Chuan-Yuan Li, assistant professor of radiation
oncology at Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center. "We're reporting a
new phenomenon - that non-DNA-damaging stresses can cause
persistent genetic instability. The frequency of mutations seen in
this study is orders of magnitude higher than previously
reported."
The results are published in the Jan. 15 issue of Cancer
Research, the journal of the American Association for Cancer
Research. The study was funded by the National Cancer Institute,
the Duke Department of Radiation Oncology, the Komen Foundation for
Breast Cancer Research, and a Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center
fellowship.
Li and his colleagues compared untreated mouse cancer cells to
those exposed to one of five severe stresses, which were designed
to kill more than 90 percent of the original cells. Each stress
caused spontaneous deletion of a marker gene and alteration of
naturally occurring repetitive DNA sequences in the genome of
surviving cells and their never-exposed progeny. The stresses
tested were ionizing radiation, hydrogen peroxide, high
temperature, nutrient starvation, and growing the cells in mice,
which creates multiple stresses.
What If . . .
There are mechanisms to explain the number of mutations found in
only a minority of cancer cells, the researchers said. In cells
that have lost the ability to repair their DNA or those with
inherited "cancer genes," for example, the mutation rate jumps to
perhaps one mutation per 1,000 cell divisions, up from one per
million for "normal" cells.
But because most cancer cells have normal DNA repair abilities, and
most people with cancer don't have a recognized hereditary
predisposition to developing the disease, repair deficiencies and
inherited predisposition aren't enough.
"Basically, if developing cancer depended on acquiring the right
set of mutations by chance alone, no one would ever get cancer,"
said co-author Mark Dewhirst, professor of radiation oncology.
"Clearly, people get cancer and there's been no convincing way to
explain how the right mutations could accumulate with enough
frequency to lead to the incidence of cancer that is
observed."
The researchers' finding that severe amounts of some
non-DNA-damaging stresses can induce long-term genetic mutability
might help explain the numerous mutations seen in cancer cells, but
it raises the question of whether the newly described process could
be involved in how cancer cells develop resistance to chemotherapy
drugs or hormonal treatment.
Developing resistance to cancer treatments is fairly common;
prostate cancers eventually become insensitive to hormonal therapy,
for example. Scientists generally believe that resistance develops
because a few cancer cells in the original tumor might be
insensitive to treatment. Thus when all the sensitive cells are
killed, only the resistant ones remain, according to the
conventional wisdom.
However, if common treatments can induce long-term genetic
instability similar to that seen in the study, resistance might
"evolve" through accumulation of mutations after treatment, rather
than from the initial survival of already resistant cells, the
researchers said. Much more research is needed to know for sure,
they added.
Li's future studies will examine other stresses and other cell
types, and will also explore the possibility of an apparent
threshold effect, as reduced stress exposure led to lower long-term
genetic instability. The researchers will also try to determine how
the stresses caused instability.
"We already know a great deal about how radiation affects normal
cells and cancerous cells," said Li. "But we know nothing about the
mechanism by which the non-DNA-damaging stresses were able to
create persistent genetic instability."
The researchers used large amounts of ionizing radiation and
hydrogen peroxide, which, like many other stresses known to damage
DNA, create highly reactive oxygen atoms, or free radicals, that
cause breaks in DNA. The other stresses used weren't known to have
any effect on genetic material.
The Study
In order to evaluate the stresses' effects on DNA, the mouse cancer
cells were engineered to express a visual marker - green
fluorescence protein (GFP) from a species of jellyfish - that makes
the cells glow green when exposed to blue light.
"Because each cell has just one copy of the GFP gene inserted into
its genome, if that gene is mutated or damaged, that cell becomes
dark," explained Li. "It's a very convenient and direct way to
examine the genetic stability."
The scientists also looked for general instability in the cells'
DNA sequence, in case the inserted GFP gene was hypersensitive. By
examining naturally occurring repetitive DNA sequences called
"minisatellites" that are scattered throughout the genome, the
researchers proved that the stresses affected native portions of
the genome as well as the inserted marker gene.
After the cells were exposed to a stress, the scientists selected
ones that still fluoresced green, indicating that the GFP gene was
still working, and allowed them to grow under standard laboratory
conditions. Much to their surprise, roughly 10 percent of the
"daughter" cell colonies several generations after exposure
contained a mix of light and dark cells, reflecting new loss of GFP
in cells never directly exposed to stress, they reported.
The majority of daughter cell colonies from exposed cells were
uniformly bright, as were all cell colonies of cells whose
"parents" were not exposed to any stress, indicating no loss of
GFP. A few daughter cell colonies of exposed cells were uniformly
dark, reflecting complete loss of GFP. The mixed, or chimeric, cell
colonies showed that new mutations were still occurring up to 23
generations after stress exposure.
Other co-authors are John Little of the Harvard School of Public
Health; Kang Hu, Wen Zhang and Li Zhang, all of Duke; and Qian
Huang, now at the People's Hospital, Shanghai.
Written by Joanna Downer.
