Watching how cancer cells develop can provide better treatment

How individual cancer cells change over time may explain why brain tumors develop so differently. And also why some cancer cells are resistant to certain treatments. A new method of mapping the development of cancer cells can make it easier to develop new effective drug combinations. A brain tumor consists of a variety of cancer cells, with different properties that are partly similar to cell types found in a healthy brain. How this diversity arises has previously been difficult to study, but is of crucial importance for which strategy can be used for drug development. If the cancer cells are hierarchically organized, it would be tactical to attack the cells at the top of the hierarchy in order to reduce the tumor. However, if the organization between cell types is more flexible, other treatment strategies are needed. New method follows the development of individual tumor cells

– To understand how the different cancer cell types are organized, we had to develop a method to follow individual cells and their offspring over time. We also needed an approach to quantitatively evaluate the results, and therefore an interdisciplinary collaboration emerged, says Sven Nelander, professor of integrative cancer research at Uppsala University.

Cancer cells are organized both hierarchically and flexibly The new method has been developed in collaboration with Chalmers University of Technology. The researchers have combined profiling of individual cells using so-called barcoding – technology with mathematical modeling and computer simulations. By applying the method to cancer cells from three different patients with brain tumors, the researchers have shown that the organization appears to be hierarchical but with a certain degree of flexibility. There are also clear patient-specific elements. They have also shown that the organization itself is affected by drug treatment. New combinations of drugs can attack the tumor – The active substance temozolomide, which is the standard treatment for brain tumors, seems to direct the cells towards a more invasive cell type. According to our model, temozolomide, in combination with a drug that specifically targets this cell type, would be an effective way to attack the tumor, says Ida Larsson, doctoral student and one of the study’s lead authors.

– We believe that this new method has great potential. In addition to helping the development of treatments for brain tumors, our method can be used on other cancers where there are currently no effective treatment methods, she says.

Scientific article:

Modeling glioblastoma heterogeneity as a dynamic network of cell states , Ida Larsson et al (2021), Molecular Systems Biology Contact:

Sven Nelander, Professor of Integrative Cancer Research at Uppsala University, .see


Ida Larsson, PhD student at Uppsala University, ida.larsson@igp.uu.se Erika Dalmo, PhD student at Uppsala University,
erika.dalmo@igp.uu.se

Note: This article has been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
New Proof Illuminates the Hidden Structure of Common Equations thumbnail

New Proof Illuminates the Hidden Structure of Common Equations

number theoryBy Leila SlomanApril 21, 2022Van der Waerden’s conjecture mystified mathematicians for 85 years. Its solution shows how polynomial roots relate to one another. The roots of polynomial equations reveal many of their secrets.Kristina Armitage/Quanta MagazineIn a recent paper, Manjul Bhargava of Princeton University has settled an 85-year-old conjecture about one of math’s most ancient…
Read More
Firefly halts launch preparations after federal government seeks divestment of foreign ownership thumbnail

Firefly halts launch preparations after federal government seeks divestment of foreign ownership

by Jeff Foust — December 30, 2021 Firefly Aerospace said the government directed the company to stop preparations for its next Alpha launch at Vandenberg Space Force Base while Noosphere Ventures worked to sell its stake in the launch provider. Credit: SpaceNews/Jeff Foust WASHINGTON — Firefly Aerospace is pausing preparations for its next Alpha launch,…
Read More
Mysterious sounds in stratosphere can't be traced to any known source thumbnail

Mysterious sounds in stratosphere can’t be traced to any known source

Technology Solar-powered balloons floating 20 kilometres above ground have recorded inaudible low-frequency signals that have so far not been traced back to any known source By Karmela Padavic-Callaghan High up in the stratosphere, there are strange soundsShutterstock/Chaleephoto Solar-powered balloons floating in the stratosphere have recorded low-frequency sounds of mysterious origin. “When we started flying balloons
Read More
NASA system predicts impact of small asteroid thumbnail

NASA system predicts impact of small asteroid

Credit: Jet Propulsion Laboratory A small asteroid hit Earth's atmosphere over the Norwegian Sea before disintegrating on March 11, 2022. But this event wasn't a complete surprise: Astronomers knew it was on a collision course, predicting exactly where and when the impact would happen. Two hours before the asteroid made impact, K. Sarneczky at the…
Read More
Hubble Space Telescope Focuses on NGC 1097 thumbnail

Hubble Space Telescope Focuses on NGC 1097

The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has captured a finely detailed image of the barred spiral galaxy NGC 1097. This Hubble image shows NGC 1097, a barred spiral galaxy some 48 million light-years away in the constellation of Fornax. The color image is made up of observations from Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 and Advanced Camera…
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share