Scots scientists make potential breakthrough in cancer treatment

University of Glasgow researchers have found a method which could be more effective than current methods

Published 28th Aug 2017

Scientists at the University of Glasgow have discovered a way of killing cancer cells that could be more effective than current treatments.

The new method – called Caspase Independent Cell Death (CICD) - led to the complete eradication of tumours in experimental models.

It works by alerting the immune system to the presence of the tumour while also killing off cancerous cells.

Currently most anti-cancer therapies, including chemotherapy, radiation and immunotherapy, work by killing cancer cells through a process called apoptosis, which activates proteins called caspases, leading to cell death.

But in apoptosis, therapies often fail to kill every cell, leading to disease recurrence.

This can sometimes also have unwanted side effects that may even promote the disease.

The scientists wanted to develop a way to improve therapy that induces cancer cell killing while also mitigating unwanted toxicity.

Dr Stephen Tait, Cancer Research UK Beatson Institute, Institute of Cancer Sciences, said: “Our research found that triggering Caspase-Independent Cell Death (CICD), but not apoptosis, often led to complete tumour regression.

“Especially under conditions of partial therapeutic response, as our experiments mimic, our data suggests that triggering tumour-specific CICD, rather than apoptosis, may be a more effective way to treat cancer.”

Unlike apoptosis, which is a silent form of cell death, when cancer cells die through CICD, they alert the immune system through the release of inflammatory proteins.

The immune system can then attack the remaining tumour cells that evaded initial therapy-induced death.

The researchers used lab-grown colorectal cancer cells to show the advantage of killing cancer cells via CICD, however, these benefits may be applicable to a wide-range of cancer types.

He added: “In essence, this mechanism has the potential to dramatically improve the effectiveness of anti–cancer therapy and reduce unwanted toxicity. Taking into consideration our findings, we propose that engaging CICD as a means of anti-cancer therapy warrants further investigation.”

Dr Justine Alford, Cancer Research UK’s senior science information officer, said: “Although many cancer treatments work by triggering apoptosis, that method sometimes fails to finish the job and instead may lead to the tumour becoming harder to treat.

“This new research suggests there could be a better way to kill cancer cells which, as an added bonus, also activates the immune system. Now scientists need to investigate this idea further and, if further studies confirm it is effective, develop ways to trigger this particular route of cell death in humans.”

The paper, ‘Mitochondrial permeabilization engages NF-kB-dependent anti-tumour activity under caspase deficiency,’ is published in Nature Cell Biology.