Virus 'harnessed to kill cancers'
Scientists believe they can beat cancer by taking advantage of its
natural desire to stay alive.
The Cancer Research UK team engineered a virus that would target and
destroy cancer cells while leaving healthy tissue untouched.
Normal cells shut themselves down when they were infected with the
virus to prevent it spreading, but the cancer cells did not.
Their findings are reported in the journal Molecular Therapy.
Viruses infect the body by entering cells undetected and taking
control of their machinery.
Being able to enter a cell by stealth makes viruses a good tool to
carry anti-cancer treatment directly into cancer cells.
The great thing about this strategy is that the cancer cell does all
the hard work
Professor Nick Lemoine
Lead researcher
The stumbling block is to ensure healthy cells are not damaged in the
process.
Professor Nick Lemoine and colleagues at Bart's and Queen Mary's
School of Medicine and Dentistry have created a modified virus that
will do just that.
The virus lacks a gene viruses normally use to disguise themselves so
they can sneak into the cell unnoticed.
Normal cells can recognise they are under attack by the modified
virus and commit suicide to prevent it from replicating and infecting
other cells.
Cancer cells are programmed differently and resist suicide at all
costs.
This "selfishness" on the cancer's behalf allows the engineered virus
to replicate within the cancer cells and spread through the tumour
tissue.
When the team tested the virus in the laboratory, it thrived in the
cancerous tissue but was eliminated from healthy tissue.
Highly selective
This should make it possible to create a highly selective anti-cancer
treatment, say the researchers.
The next step is to put a toxic gene into the virus to poison the
cancer cells.
The researchers believe only a small number of copies of the virus
will be needed to be effective because the cancer makes more copies
of the virus.
Lead investigator Professor Lemoine said: "The great thing about this
strategy is that the cancer cell does all the hard work.
"It makes more and more virus to infect its neighbouring cancer
cells."
This might make it possible to inject the modified virus into the
patient's bloodstream, unlike other viral therapies currently being
developed that have to be injected directly into the tumour.
The team plans to test the virus in clinical trials next year.
Professor Robert Souhami, Cancer Research UK's director of clinical
and external affairs, said: "In tests so far it has proven both
potent and selective, although only clinical trials will tell us
whether the approach can be an effective treatment in people."
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/health/3921693.stm
Published: 2004/07/24 23:29:00 GMT