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Scientists have found a new method to block a master switch that enables cancer cells to adapt to low oxygen levels and survive. Cancer Research UK scientists at the University of Southampton found a way to block the master switch – HIF-1 – that cancer cells use to adapt to low oxygen levels,a common feature in the disease.
The researchers blocked cancer cells from using this switch through an approach called ‘synthetic biology’. By testing 3.2 million potential compounds,made by specially engineered bacteria,they were able to find a molecule that stopped HIF-1 from working.
HIF-1 triggers the formation of new blood vessels around tumours,causing more oxygen and nutrients to be delivered to the starving tumour,which in turn allows it to keep growing.
“We’ve found a way to target the steps that cancer cells take to survive and we hope that our research will one day lead to effective drugs that can stop cancers adapting to a low oxygen environment,stopping their growth,” said Dr Ali Tavassoli,a Cancer Research UK scientist whose team discovered and developed the compound at the University of Southampton.
“The next step is to further develop this molecule to create an effective treatment,” Tavassoli said. “For the first time our scientists have found a way to block a master switch controlling cells response to low levels of oxygen an important step towards creating drugs that could halt cancer in its tracks,” said Dr Julie Sharp,senior science information manager at Cancer Research UK. The study was published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society.