A shortcut to preventing cancer - SCIENCETINE
Finally.. A shortcut to preventing cancer!
According to a recent theory, mutations have a
few simple means of establishing themselves in cells and causing tumors. The
road to cancer prevention is lengthy and tough for many researchers, but a
recent study by Rice University scientists reveals that there may be shortcuts.
Rice scientist Anatoly Kolomeisky,
postdoctoral researcher Hamid Teimouri, and research assistant Cade Spaulding
are working on a theoretical framework that will explain how tumors caused by a
variety of genetic alterations might be better identified and possibly
prevented.

(Authors are, from the left, Cade Spaulding, Anatoly Kolomeisky and Hamid Teimouri
Credit: Rice University)
The
report, which was published in the Biophysical Journal on May 13th, 2022,
describes their investigation into the effective energy landscapes of cellular
transformation pathways linked to a number of cancers. The capacity to narrow
down the number of pathways to those that are most likely to initiate cancer
could aid in the development of techniques to interrupt the process before it
begins.
“In
some sense, cancer is a bad- luck story”said Kolomeisky, a chemistry
and chemical and biomolecular
engineering professor.
“We think we can decrease the probability of this bad luck by looking for
low-probability collections of mutations that typically lead to cancer.
Depending on the type of cancer, this can range between two mutations and 10.”
The
effective energies that regulate interactions in biomolecular systems can be
used to predict how they will behave. The theory is extensively used to predict
how a protein would fold based on the sequence and interaction of its
constituent atoms.
(A
Rice University algorithm identifies and disregards transition pathways that
don't contribute much to the fixation of mutations in a cell that goes on to
form a tumor. Credit: Hamid
Teimouri/Rice University)
According
to Kolomeisky's calculations, the chances favor the most dominant routes, which
move mutations forward with the least amount of energy expended.
“Instead
of looking at all possible chemical reactions, we identify the few that we
might need to look at,” he explained. “It seems to us that most tissues
involved in the initiation of cancer are trying to be as homogenous as
possible. The rule is a pathway that decreases heterogeneity is always going to
be the fastest on the road to tumor formation.”
The
enormous number of possible paths appears to make reducing them down an
impossible task.
“But
it turned out that using our chemical intuition and building an effective
free-energy landscape helped by allowing us to calculate where in the process a
mutation is likely to become fixated in a cell,” Kolomeisky said.
The
researchers started by focusing on pathways with only two mutations that, when
corrected, cause a tumor to form. More mutations, according to Kolomeisky, will
make calculations more complicated, but the technique will remain the same.
“Cade
has outstanding ability in computer programming and in implementing
sophisticated algorithms despite his very young age,” Kolomeisky said. “He came
up with the most efficient Monte Carlo simulations to test our theory, where
the size of the system can involve up to a billion cells.”
Spaulding
said the project combined his interests in chemistry, physics, and biology with
his computer programming talents in a way that he enjoys.
“It
was good way to combine all of the branches of science and also programming,
which is what I find most interesting,” he said. The research builds on a report
published in 2019 in which the Rice group studied stochastic (random) processes
to figure out why some cancerous cells manage to overcome the body's defenses
and spread the disease. But, according to Kolomeisky, understanding how those
cells become cancerous in the first place could help prevent them from becoming
cancerous in the first place. “This has implications for personalized
medicine,” he said. “If a tissue test can find mutations, our framework might
tell you if you are likely to develop a tumor and whether you need to have more
frequent checkups. I think this powerful framework can be a tool for
prevention.”
The Welch Foundation (C-1559), the National Science Foundation (1953453,
1941106) and the NSF-supported Center for Theoretical Biological Physics
(2019745) supported the research.
Reference:
“Optimal pathways control fixation of multiple mutations during cancer
initiation” by Hamid Teimouri, Cade Spaulding and Anatoly B. Kolomeisky, 13 May
2022, Biophysical Journal.
2022-06-23
Amazing Article. Good Job
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