Researchers Find A Way To Make Leukemia Cells Kill Each Other

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Learn how researchers find a way to make Leukemia cells kill each other. Check out the article we found over at Medical Daily.

A treatment that changes cancerous cells into healthy, supportive cells sounds ideal. Transforming malignant cells into antibodies that would attack remaining cancer cells sounds too good to be true. Thanks to a groundbreaking study by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI), this new, powerful form of cancer therapy could really be on the horizon.

An Accidental Discovery

The laboratory team was working on therapies for certain immune cell or blood factor deficiencies when they noticed some unusual effects of antibodies on marrow cells. They had been searching for antibodies that activate growth-factor receptors on immature bone marrow cells, meaning the antibodies would be able to induce these cells to mature into specific blood cell types.

After successfully identifying a number of antibodies that activated the bone marrow cell-receptors this way, the researchers noticed that some of the antibodies were having unexpected effects on the cells. Some of them were maturing into cells that were radically different from what had been expected, such as neural cells. This got the team thinking, could this method be used to convert cancerous marrow cells (leukemia cells) into non-cancerous cells?

Transformation

In the new study, Richard A. Lerner, institute professor and the Lita Annenberg Hazen professor of Immunochemistry at TSRI and senior investigator, teamed up with colleagues, including first author Kyungmoo Yea, an assistant professor of cellular and molecular biology at TSRI. They decided to test 20 of the recently discovered receptor-activating antibodies on acute myeloid leukemia cells taken from human patients. One of the antibodies ended up having an incredible impact on the leukemia cells.

Most acute myeloid leukemia cells have the thrombopoietin (TPO) receptor, a receptor the winning antibody selectively and potently activated in marrow cells. When the antibody was applied to healthy marrow cells, the cells matured into blood-platelet-producing cells (megakaryocytes). When applied to the acute myeloid leukemia cells, though, the antibody caused them to mature into dendritic cells, which are key support cells in the body’s immune system.

This alone would have been a success — the researchers had effectively transformed cancerous cells into non-cancerous, helpful immune system cells. The team pushed further, though, and found that with longer exposures to the antibodies and other regulated conditions, the dendritic cells matured even more. The final product was a group of cells that very closely resembled natural killer (NK) cells. One of the body’s rapid immune defenses, NK cells are capable of rapidly attacking potentially dangerous pathogens and tumors even if they don’t contain the biomarkers normally identified by other immune cells.

“That antibody could have turned those acute myeloid leukemia cells into a lot of other cell types, but somehow we were lucky enough to get NK cells,” Lerner said in a press release.

“It’s a totally new approach to cancer, and we’re working to test it in human patients as soon as possible,” Lerner said. “We’re in discussions with pharmaceutical companies to take this straight into humans after the appropriate preclinical toxicity studies.”

Next Article: Grape Seed Extract Can Help Us Treat Cancer And Is Better Than Chemotherapy

Read full article: Cancer Treatment Breakthrough: Researchers Engineer A Way To Make Leukemia Cells Kill Each Other



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14 Responses to “Researchers Find A Way To Make Leukemia Cells Kill Each Other”

  1. Karen Plank Peschke

    Oct 22. 2015

    Kristine Cerbone

    Reply to this comment
  2. Jona Ramey

    Oct 22. 2015

    But will they use it.

    Reply to this comment
  3. Rasamee Jaycox

    Oct 22. 2015

    And can anyone be able to afford it

    Reply to this comment
  4. Leona Martain

    Jan 30. 2016

    Debb Beckstead

    Reply to this comment
  5. Janet Doell

    Jan 30. 2016

    Kera King Caraway…

    Reply to this comment
  6. Zahia Halabi

    Jan 30. 2016

    Kadmoos Halabi Carla Frias

    Reply to this comment
  7. Gretchen Cates

    Jan 30. 2016

    Lacia Ukkestad love u! Hope you’re doing well

    Reply to this comment
  8. Tiffany Kennah

    Jan 30. 2016

    Blain Kennah read this. It is very encouraging.

    Reply to this comment
  9. Blain Kennah

    Jan 30. 2016

    I will gladly be a test dummy for this

    Reply to this comment
  10. Chris Dove

    Mar 17. 2016

    Allen Dove.

    Reply to this comment
  11. Rachel Diederich

    Mar 18. 2016

    It would be nice if it’s true

    Reply to this comment
  12. European Home Remedies

    Dec 15. 2016

    Hey, thanks for publishing! :p

    Reply to this comment
  13. Oil Supplements

    Dec 17. 2017

    Gosh :p

    Reply to this comment
  14. Renee Lowsir

    Dec 17. 2017

    Jennifer Yerk

    Reply to this comment

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