health news arrowHome >> Fitness & Exercise >> Cholesterol Plays Cancer-Prevention Role at Cellular Level Wed, 09 Jul 2008 GMT 
health news
  NEWS YOU CAN TRUST

Search Health News 
Browser Preferences
 Add to Favorites

Main Menu
 Home
 - - - - - Hot Topics - - - - -
 Bird Flu
 Drug Safety
 Stem Cell Research
 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 Alternative Medicine
 Children's Health
 Diet & Nutrition
 Disabilities
 *Diseases & Conditions
 Drugs & Herbs
 Environmental Health
 Fitness & Exercise
 Genetic Research
 Health Insurance
 Medical Ethics
 Men's Health
 *Mental Illness
 Pain
 Parenting
 Public Health & Safety
 Senior Care
 *Sexual Health
 Women's Health
 World Health
 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
 Web Links
 Contact Us: info@dailynewscentral.com

XML News Feeds


 

HEALTH NEWS

Cholesterol Plays Cancer-Prevention Role at Cellular Level

PDF  Print  E-mail
Contributed by Jai A. Dennison|  06 March, 2005  17:53 GMT


Through an interaction with a protein called the
Scientists have discovered that cholesterol has a novel role inside the cell: anchoring a signaling pathway linked to cell division and cancer. This new discovery by researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center is published in the March 4 issue of Science.

"Cell signals have to be tightly controlled," says Dr. Richard G.W. Anderson, chairman of cell biology and senior author of the study. "If the signaling machines do not work, which can happen when the cell doesn't have enough cholesterol, the cell gets the wrong information, and disease results."

Though it has earned a bad reputation for its role in heart disease, the fact that cholesterol is essential for the health of cell membranes long has been understood. The cell membrane, which is fluid in nature, contains cholesterol.

Keeps Cancer-Related ERK Under Control

Dr. Anderson's research focuses on regions of the membrane where cholesterol is enriched. These regions, called "lipid domains," are more rigid than the rest of the cell membrane because of cholesterol and play a critical role in organizing signaling machinery at the cell surface. The correct arrangement of signaling modules in these domains is vital for communication inside the cell and is dependent on proper levels of cholesterol.

While studying how cholesterol moves to the membrane to get to lipid domains, Dr. Anderson, who holds the Cecil H. Green Distinguished Chair in Cellular and Molecular Biology, and colleagues found that cholesterol can work outside the membrane to regulate a key signaling pathway that occurs inside the cell.

Through an interaction with a protein called the "oxysterol binding protein" (OSBP), cholesterol holds together a group of enzymes that deactivates extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK). Overactive ERK is associated with multiple cancers.

When the amount of cholesterol in lipid domains is normal, the OSBP-cholesterol complex keeps the amount of active ERK under control. When cholesterol in the domains gets too low, however, the complex falls apart, leading to abnormally high levels of active ERK.

Dr. Anderson and colleagues noticed that OSBP has binding sites for both cholesterol and the other proteins in the complex. They believe that when cholesterol binds OSBP it changes shape to bind the key enzymes in a way that allows them to work together to control deactivation of ERK. When lipid domain cholesterol gets low, OSBP loses its cholesterol and no longer is able to bind the enzymes that deactivate ERK, keeping it active.

May Have Application to Other Diseases

"OSBP appears to work like a cholesterol-regulated scaffolding protein that controls a key signaling pathway," Dr. Anderson explains.

"This work shows a new way that lipids can regulate key signaling pathways and raises the possibility that other lipid-regulated signaling scaffolds can malfunction in other diseases," he adds.

Other UT Southwestern contributors to the study were Dr. Jian Weng, assistant professor of cell biology, and Dr. Ping-Yuan Wang, postdoctoral researcher in cell biology and lead author.

Related Articles
New Drug May Stop Chemo-Resistant Cancers (14 Mar 2005)
Defective Stem Cells May Be Cause of Recurring Breast Cancer (5 Jan 2006)
Research Suggests Promising New Depression Therapy (28 Jul 2005)
Tobacco Smoke Spurs Production of Cancer-Causing Protein (15 Jan 2005)
Chinese Herb May Slow Down Cancer (19 Apr 2005)
Cell Phones Exonerated in New Brain Cancer Study (12 Apr 2005)
 
Sponsored Text Links
InsureMe.com: Click here to get a free health insurance quote.
SkinStore.com: StriVectin-SD
Hydroderm: Lose wrinkles with Hydroderm
Hydroderm: Body Shape - Proven to be safe and effective - Free Trial!
SkinStore.com: Strivectin SD 6oz Best Price Offer