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University of Houston College of Pharmacy associate professor Gomika Udugamasooriya discovered a new biomarker, plectin, in cancer stem cells that governs cancer survival and spread.
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Discovery: New Biomarker for Cancer Stem Cells

Protein Linked to Tumor Survival and Spread

Discovery: New Biomarker for Cancer Stem Cells

2 Minute Read

In the world of cancer biology, not all biomarkers are created equal. These molecules that alert doctors that an abnormal process may be underway can appear as an array of aberrant proteins, such as hormones, enzymes or signaling molecules, and vary from patient to patient. Because they are a mixed bag, no one drug exists to attack them. But now, a University of Houston College of Pharmacy associate professor has discovered a new biomarker in cancer stem cells that govern cancer survival and spread, and it’s raising hope that drug discovery to kill cancer stem cells could follow suit.

“We have found a new biomarker, the protein plectin, on cancer stem cells. We believe plectin may be a more common biomarker that could lead to broadly applicable drug development,” reports Gomika Udugamasooriya in Nature Scientific Reports. “Plectin is a structural protein, predominantly expressed intracellularly, but whose translocation onto the cell surface is linked to tumor invasion and metastasis.”

All cancerous tumors contain a small subset of drug-resisting, self-renewing, and highly metastatic cells called tumor-initiating cells, or cancer stem cells, responsible for 90% of cancer deaths.

Udugamasooriya’s process of discovering the biomarker and a drug-lead is different than conventional two-step discoveries, where researchers first find a biomarker and then develop a drug. He did both at once – developing 400,000 potential synthetic chemical compounds (peptoids) and used them to capture the specific biomarker performing his unique, but simple two-color cell screen. From almost half a million, only three peptoids targeted cancer stem cells and not the remaining cancer cells from the same patient. When those peptoids were used to pulldown their targets, one of them was identified as plectin, proving that it is a unique biomarker for cancer stem cells.

“Our studies show both genotypic and phenotypic correlations between plectin and lung cancer stem cells, as well as association of high plectin expression with poor patient survival in lung adenocarcinoma, potentially identifying plectin as a biomarker for lung cancer stem cells,” reports Udugamasooriya.

Because plectin assists in shaping cells, it is pivotal to the spread of cancer, helping cancer stem cells wend their way through the body.

“Scientists are desperately trying to find ways to handle these stubborn cancer stem cells to wipe out tumors. We predict this will be a more common drug target than current ones, because all tumors want to spread,” he said.

Udugamasooriya is joined in this research by John D. Minna of University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. This research was funded by an NIH-Career Development Award Udugamasooriya received and funds from University of Houston. Udugamasooriya said the team is now successfully exploring the peptoid chemical compound that targets plectin as a potential drug-lead and drug delivery agent.

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