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Plant Attacks The Roots Of Leukemia
A daisy-like plant known as Feverfew or Bachelor's Button, found
in gardens across North America, is the source of an agent that
kills human leukemia stem cells like no other single therapy,
scientists at the University of Rochester Medical Center's James
P. Wilmot Cancer Center have discovered. Their investigation is
reported in the online edition of the journal, Blood.
It will take months before a useable, pharmaceutical compound
can be made from parthenolide, the main component in Feverfew.
However, UR stem cell expert Craig T. Jordan, Ph.D., and Monica
L. Guzman, Ph.D., lead author on the Blood paper, say their group
is collaborating with University of Kentucky chemists, who have
identified a water-soluble molecule that has the same properties
as parthenolide.
The National Cancer Institute has accepted this work into its
rapid access program, which aims to move experimental drugs from
the laboratory to human clinical trials as quickly as possible.
"This research is a very important step in setting the stage
for future development of a new therapy for leukemia," says Jordan.
"We have proof that we can kill leukemia stem cells with this
type of agent, and that is good news."
Parthenolide is the first single agent known to act on myeloid
leukemia at the stem-cell level, which is significant because
current cancer treatments do not strike deep enough to kill mutant
cells where the malignancy is born.
In other words, even the most progressive leukemia treatment,
a relatively new drug called Gleevec, is effective only to a degree.
It does not reach the stem cells, so "you're pulling the weed
without getting to the root," Jordan says.
Feverfew has been used for centuries as an herbal remedy to reduce
fevers and inflammation, to prevent migraine headaches, and to
ease symptoms from arthritis. (A person with leukemia, however,
would not be able to take enough of the herbal remedy to halt
the disease.)
Investigating stem cells that give rise to cancer is an urgent
new initiative, as is identifying stem-cell treatments that might
end the disease process. Jordan and Guzman are among only a handful
of stem cell biologists nationwide who are specifically studying
cancer stem cells. In recent years, scientists have identified
cancer stems cells in blood cancers and in brain and breast tumors
– although the idea that cancer stems cells exist has been around
for at least 40 years.
In the current study, the UR group began investigating Feverfew
after other scientists showed that it prevented some skin cancers
in animal models. Intrigued by the plant's anti-tumor activities,
the UR team analyzed how a concentrated form of parthenolide would
act on the most primitive types of acute myelogenous leukemia
cells, chronic myelogenous leukemia cells and normal cells.
In laboratory experiments, they also compared how human leukemia
stem cells reacted to parthenolide, versus a common chemotherapy
drug called cytarabine. The result: parthenolide selectively killed
the leukemia cells while sparing the normal cells better than
cytarabine.
Scientists believe parthenolide might also make cancer more sensitive
to other anti-tumor agents. And, the UR group was able to demonstrate
the molecular pathways that allow parthenolide to cause apoptosis,
or cancer cell death, increasing the chances of developing a new
therapy.
Jordan is director of the Translational Research for Hematologic
Malignancies program at the Wilmot Cancer Center and associate
professor of Medicine and Biomedical Genetics. Guzman is senior
instructor of hematology/oncology.
Reference
Source 131
February 25, 2005
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