Targeting
the triggers
(continued)
"Twenty
years ago we believed that cells became malignant when they went
out of control and multiplied," said Kung, who earned his Ph.D.
in chemistry at Cal Tech in 1975. "Now we know that is only
part of the answer. To become malignant, we now know, cells must
know how both to grow and how not to die. So we must look at what
gives the cell both messages. If we can find that trigger or triggers,
it may be a target for therapy because we would only have to devise
ways to affect this regulatory pathway rather than to try to target
the very subtle molecular differences in cancer cells themselves."
Kinases,
so
-
called because they can add a phosphate molecule to a protein, fit
that bill nicely, according to Kung.
"The
tyrosine kinases are the trigger," said Kung. "So we believe
that when it comes to devising therapeutic cancer strategies that
will convert cancer cells back to healthy cells, altering the trigger
is an easier target than trying to alter the biochemistry of the
cell."
Tyrosine
kinases are only found in highly evolved multicellular organisms,
where cells have to grow, multiply and also die for the organism
to remain healthy. That's why they make a logical target as a cancer-causing
suspect.
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