![]() Previously unknown cancer tell-tale caught in the act |
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May 6, 2008
Minerva Biotechnology, a nanotechnology, cancer and stem cell development company based in Waltham, Mass., today announced a breakthrough in a cancer target that is widely expressed in human cancers. Minerva used its proprietary nanoparticle technology to elucidate a key molecular mechanism that is involved in cancer cell growth and metastasis.
Using its nanoparticle research platform, Minerva has shown that MUC1 is actually cleaved to a new form, called MUC1* (‘star’). Once cleaved, MUC1* dimerizes with itself and other growth factor receptors through binding of a newly discovered ligand for MUC1*, called NM23. Binding and dimerization then acts to activate the tumor to unregulated cell growth, invasion and metastasis. Blocking MUC1* dimerization and NM23 binding leads to cancer cell death. Minerva has identified both antibody-based and small molecule therapeutics that disable the receptor and block cancer cell growth. This new discovery may also lead to better diagnostics. In collaboration with a leading diagnostic reference lab in California, Minerva has shown that MUC1* is expressed to much higher levels than MUC1 in a variety of human tumor tissues, and in the future could provide both diagnostic and prognostic information on tumor development. http://www.azonano.com/news.asp?newsID=6382 Minerva Biotechnology: http://www.minervabio.com/ The study, “A minimal fragment of MUC1 mediates growth of cancer cells,” is available here: http://www.plosone.org/doi/pone.0002054 SOURCE: AZONano.com |
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