ADAM-12 gene can serve as treatment target for cancer, arthritis, cardiac hypertrophy

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ADAM-12 is not only the name of a 1970's television police drama - it's also the gene that University of Missouri researchers believe could be an important element in the fight against cancer, arthritis, and cardiac hypertrophy, or thickening of the heart's walls.

Alpana Ray, research associate professor in the MU College of Veterinary Medicine, and a team of researchers including Bimal Ray, professor of Veterinary Pathobiology, have been studying the ADAM family of genes for several years. Alpana Ray's latest publication in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) discusses one pathway by which the ADAM-12 gene could be regulated, a process that could eventually be used as part of a treatment plan.

Scientists know that ADAM-12 is normally found in very low levels in adults, but during cancer, arthritis and cardiac hypertrophy, ADAM-12 level goes up. The only time it is normal to find a high level of the gene is during pregnancy, when ADAM-12 can be found in the placenta.

At the molecular level, Ray's team found a Z-DNA-binding silencer element that keeps the level of ADAM-12 low in normal conditions. They believe that if they could alter Z-DNA-binding silencer, new therapies could be right around the corner.

"We are finding that in the placenta, where ADAM-12 is highly expressed, the repressor protein (Z-DNA-binding protein) is inactive. In other tissues, where ADAM-12 expression is low, the repressor is active," Alpana Ray said. "What we don't know is how it actually works. We know co-factors are at work here. If we can identify the class of proteins that interact with Z-DNA repressor, it could lead to many therapeutic applications."

Because ADAM-12 is a versatile gene, it may play a role in metastasis during which cancer cells travel throughout the body and spread to other organs.

"We know that ADAM-12 causes cells to anchor to one another, and we know that ADAM-12 allows cancer cells to proliferate," said Alpana Ray.

Bimal Ray notes that the next phase of the work would be to determine how the Z-DNA-binding protein works.

"Most of the success in cancer therapy lies in a combination of approaches and chemotherapies, and this could become another piece of the puzzle that leads to the cure," Bimal Ray said.

Source: University of Missouri-Columbia

Comments

  1. e.a.greenhalgh e.a.greenhalgh Canada says:

    Good for the team that has found that ADAM 12 gene inter-relates cancer and cell growth at normal times in tissue development. I had started work on this with Cell Death Signal Gene in the 1980s being a Reproductive Endocrinologist. BUT my work was blacklisted so the U of Waterloo could commit NIH scholarship fraud with Yale. I have asked Pres. Obama for help, because this discovery is bigger than everyone realizes. It connects disease formation and the control of evolution. It is also important to the development of vaccines against emerging diseases for which man has no immunity. So I applaud the discovery, I must ask the public for help to continue the research, read the website , then email Pres. Obama using the WH email and email the US Bioethics Commission and ask them to respond to the material on the website. Think about it, it has taken 25 years for some one else to discover my theories, can you afford to let more people die so a university can cover up fraud.?

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