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Home » New molecule shows promise in targeting SCLC cells and boosting immunity

New molecule shows promise in targeting SCLC cells and boosting immunity

A molecule has demonstrated its ability to kill and incite an immune response in preclinical models of small cell lung (SCLC), according to UT Southwestern Medical Center researchers. The findings, published in Nature Communications, could lead to more successful treatments for SCLC, one of the leading causes of cancer-related deaths in the U.S.

“We have a really exciting new drug that could target a disease that's very difficult to treat,” said Esra A. Akbay, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Pathology and a member of the Development and Program of the Harold C. Simmons Comprehensive Cancer Center at UT Southwestern. “This research marks a crucial step toward potentially reshaping the standard of care for small cell lung cancer patients.”

With more than 32,000 new cases expected to be diagnosed in the U.S. in 2024, SCLC is a particularly lethal cancer with limited effective treatment options. While SCLC may initially respond to therapeutics, they're highly metastatic and tend to develop treatment resistance. They're also successful at concealing themselves from the 's immune system.

Scientists believe that treatment resistance is tied, in part, to the abundance of cancer-initiating (CICs) in these tumors that, in turn, increase the total number of SCLC cells and drive their migration and spread to other organs. CICs produce telomerase, an enzyme that preserves telomeres, which are the protective caps at the end of DNA sequences. Normal cells die or senesce as their telomeres shorten over time. In , however, the telomerase enzyme helps cancer cells maintain their telomeres, live longer, and metastasize.

Dr. Akbay and her team devised a series of tests using the telomere-targeting molecule 6-thio-2′-deoxyguanosine (6-thio-dG). After entering the bloodstream, 6-thio-dG is rapidly incorporated into tumor cells where it damages telomeres and causes cell death while at the same time sparing healthy cells.

“It's difficult to devise treatments that affect cancer cell DNA because most of the time they're also toxic to cells, which produce immune and blood cells,” Dr. Akbay explained. “But 6-thio-dG is nontoxic to healthy cells in therapeutic doses.”

Dr. Akbay's team tested the efficacy of 6-thio-dG both in vitro and in mouse models and found that it inhibits the growth of SCLC cells, even those resistant to chemotherapy.

The drug also had positive effects on the tumor immune . Researchers found that 6-thio-dG makes SCLC in more visible to the immune system. It increased recruitment of T cells and natural killer cells and decreased the presence of myeloid cells that can promote tumor growth. In mice with intact immune systems, they found that 6-thio-dG can sensitize SCLC cells to radiation treatment.

Source: UT Southwestern Medical Center