Scientists have found a new aging-associated protein known to be involved in cancer.
The new study by investigators at Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Centre and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) identifies the protein SIRT2 as a tumour suppressor linked to gender-specific tumour development in mice.
Previous studies indicated that two other members of the sirtuin family - SIRT1 and SIRT3 - have tumour suppressor functions. These findings suggest that a third member of this protein family acts as a tumour suppressor.
"The single most important prognostic factor in cancer is increasing age," said Gius, a professor of Radiation Oncology and associate professor of Cancer Biology at Vanderbilt-Ingram.
"It seems logical that the genes that play a role in aging - or perhaps better stated, anti-aging - would be connected to cancer," he stated.n the new study, Gius' lab - working with senior author Chu-Xia Deng, Ph.D., and colleagues at the NIH's National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases - investigated the physiological functions of SIRT2 by eliminating the protein in cultured cells and in mice.
They found that SIRT2-deficient mice developed tumours in multiple tissues - and, strangely, male mice and female mice developed tumours in different tissues.
Lack of SIRT2 in female mice led to mammary (breast) tumours, while male mice lacking SIRT2 developed a range of gastrointestinal tumours (in the liver, pancreas, colon and stomach).
"It's kind of a startling observation, that you'd knock a protein out, and you'd get gender-specific tumours, suggesting a physiological connection between gender and the function of sirtuin proteins," Gius said.
While the mechanism underlying the gender-specific tumours was not determined, the researchers did find evidence that SIRT2 acted as a tumour suppressor in cultured cells.
The study was recently published in Cancer Cell. (ANI)