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09/20/2018 17:00

CT45 – A key to long-term survival in ovarian cancer

Dr. Christiane Menzfeld Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Max-Planck-Institut für Biochemie

    The diagnosis of ovarian cancer is still comparable to a death sentence. Only one in six patients survives more than 10 years after diagnosis. In a new study, an international research team from Germany, the USA, and Denmark, identified a molecular mechanism that is linked to patient long-term survival for those roughly 20% of the patients. By proteomic analysis, the protein CT45 was identified as a novel prognostic cancer cell marker. The authors further showed that the protein itself increases cancer cell death after platinum chemotherapy and activates the patient’s immune system. This work will be published in the renowned scientific journal Cell.

    Ovarian Cancer
    Ovarian cancer is a very aggressive disease. Only every sixth patient survives more than 10 years after the first diagnosis. The majority of patients succumb to the disease within the first two years, which is mainly due to late detection of the disease when the tumor has already spread from the ovaries to the surrounding organs in the abdomen. Standard treatment involves surgical debulking followed by platinum-based chemotherapy. “Although, for the majority of patients, this typically leads to an immediate response to therapy and reduction of tumor mass, the therapeutic effects are rarely permanent”, explains Prof. Dr. Ernst Lengyel from the University of Chicago, a world-leading gynecological oncologist. With over 42,000 deaths per year, ovarian cancer is the deadliest gynecologic malignancy in Europe.

    Cause analysis
    Scientists from the Max Planck Institute (MPI) of Biochemistry in Martinsried, Munich, have now in collaboration with researchers from Chicago and Copenhagen set out to elucidate the molecular basis for patient long-term survival. "Only if we understand the molecular causes and differences between patients who respond well or poorly to therapy, will we improve the treatment of ovarian cancer in the clinic, and also pave the way for more personalized treatment options in the future" explains Lengyel, who initiated the study together with Prof. Dr. Matthias Mann, a pioneer and leading scientist in the field of mass spectrometry based proteomics. Mann is director at the MPI of Biochemistry and head of the department "Proteomics and Signal Transduction". The DNA within our cells contains the instruction how to assemble proteins, the molecular machines that form the main players of most biological processes such as for metabolism or cellular signaling. In recent years, Mann and his team has developed and refined the technology of mass spectrometry for protein analysis to be for clinical use. "Using mass spectrometry, we can identify for the first time almost all of the proteins, the proteome, in the tumor tissue of the patients," says Mann. "Our highly sensitive methods now enable profiling thousands of proteins simultaneously, allowing us to search for the proteins that are critical to the disease by comparing the tissue samples," Prof. Mann continues.

    CT45 influences long-term survival
    For their analysis, the researchers used archived biobank material from the University of Chicago collected over many years, most of which originated from the initial operation of the patients. "This way, we can look back to the past in a way because we know exactly how the patient reacted to chemotherapy," says Dr. Fabian Coscia, first-author of the study and a Ph.D. student with Dr. Mann and now a postdoctoral fellow in Copenhagen. With the help of mass spectrometry, the researchers discovered a protein called CT45, completely unknown till then, which was significantly increased in long-term survivors. Subsequent tests in the laboratory have confirmed the CT45 findings. When cancer cells produced the protein in cell culture, cells died much faster from standard chemotherapy.

    CT45 a suicide gene?
    But why does the cancer produce the protein CT45 if it promotes its own killing after chemotherapy? "The simple answer to this is that the cancer does not ‘know’ that it will be treated with platinum based chemotherapy" explains Coscia. "The samples we analyzed with proteomics were taken before chemotherapy. An adaptation of the tumor to the treatment has not yet taken place. We made similar observations in laboratory studies with isolated ovarian cancer cells."

    Healthy cells normally only produce proteins that are needed for their specific tasks, for example, tasks typical for ovarian function. Although the blueprint for proteins, DNA, is the same in all cells, most of the protein assembly instructions are biochemically sealed. This means that only the ovary-specific "program", i.e. DNA, can be accessed. However, once a cell transforms and becomes a cancerous cell, it can lose its seal, the so-called methylation, and often proteins such as CT45 are then produced. Currently there are the first drugs in clinical trials that have a de-methylating effect. Experiments in cell culture indicate that the effectiveness of chemotherapy can be improved by these so-called DNA-de-methylating drugs. “We suspect that CT45 plays a major role in this because it is one of the most abundant proteins in the tumor induced by the drug. This gives us hope that patients who do not have the protein in their tumor could still benefit from combination chemotherapy," says Dr. Marion Curtis, a postdoctoral fellow in the Lengyel laboratory and the last author of the study.

    Blessing in disguise
    The researchers have made great progress in understanding CT45’s function. This gives hope for the development of new and more targeted therapeutic approaches. "We have evidence that tumor-specific expression of CT45 stimulates the patient's immune system to fight the cancer, as it would be the case with a virus or bacterial-infected cell. "Our long-term goal is to find new ways to improve patient outcomes based on these exciting new insights," summarizes Prof. Dr. Lengyel.


    Contact for scientific information:

    Prof. Dr. Matthias Mann
    Proteomics and Signal Transduction
    Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry
    Am Klopferspitz 18
    82152 Martinsried/Munich
    Germany
    E-mail: mmann@biochem.mpg.de
    hhttp://www.biochem.mpg.de/en/rd/mann


    Original publication:

    Original publication:
    F. Coscia, E. Lengyel, J. Duraiswamy, B. Ashcroft, M. Bassani-Sternberg, M. Wierer, A. Johnson, K. Wroblewski, A. Montag, S. D. Yamada, B. López-Méndez, J. Nilsson, A. Mund, M. Mann, and M. Curtis: Multi-level proteomics identifies CT45 as a chemosensitivity mediator and immunotherapy target in ovarian cancer, Cell, September 2018


    More information:

    http://www.biochem.mpg.de/en/20180920-coscia-mann


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    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists, Scientists and scholars, Students
    Biology, Medicine
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

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