(PressMediaWire) New Haven, Conn. — Metastasis, the spread of cancer
throughout the body, can be explained by the fusion of a cancer cell
with a white blood cell in the original tumor, according to Yale School
of Medicine researchers, who say that this single event can set the
stage for cancer’s migration to other parts of the body.
Their work was Published in the May issue of Nature Reviews Cancer.
The studies, spanning 15 years, have revealed that the newly formed
hybrid of the cancer cell and white blood cell adapts the white blood
cell’s natural ability to migrate around the body, while going through
the uncontrolled cell division of the original cancer cell. This causes
a metastatic cell to emerge, which like a white blood cell, can migrate
through tissue, enter the circulatory system and travel to other
organs.
“This is a unifying explanation for metastasis,” said John Pawelek,
a researcher in the Department of Dermatology at Yale School of
Medicine and at Yale Cancer Center, who conducted the studies with
colleague Ashok K. Chakraborty and several other Yale scientists.
“Although we know a vast amount about cancer, how a cancer cell becomes
metastatic still remains a mystery.”
The fusion theory was first proposed in the early 1900s and has
attracted a lot of scientific interest over the years. Pawelek and his
colleagues began their research several years ago by fusing white blood
cells with tumor cells. These experimental hybrids the researchers
observed, were remarkably metastatic and lethal when implanted into
mice. In addition, the scientists noted, some of the molecules the
hybrids used to metastasize originated from white blood cells, and
these molecules were the same as those used by metastatic cells in
human cancers. Pawelek and his team then validated previous findings
that hybridization occurs naturally in mice, and results in metastatic
cancer.
“Viewing the fusion of a cancer cell and a white blood cell as the
initiating event for metastasis suggests that metastasis is virtually
another disease imposed on the pre-existing cancer cell,” said Pawelek.
“We expect this to open new areas for therapy based on the fusion
process itself.”
The research team recently began studying cancers from individuals
who had received a bone marrow transplant—a new source of white blood
cells for the patient. Genes from the transplanted white blood cells
were found in the patient tumor cells, indicating that fusion with
white blood cells had occurred. But Pawelek said these studies must be
greatly expanded before his team can say with certainty that white
blood cell fusion accounts for cancer metastasis in humans.
“To date, the fusion theory and the considerable evidence supporting
it have largely been overlooked by the cancer research community,” said
Pawelek. “The motivation for our article is to encourage other
laboratories to join in.”
Citation: Nature Reviews Cancer 8: 377-386 (May, 2008).
SOURCE: Yale University