Cell find aids quest for cancer drugs
Fresh insights into how our cells multiply could help scientists develop drugs to treat cancer.
Researchers at the University have led a study that enables better understanding of the workings of two key proteins that control cell division.
This process must be carried out accurately to keep cells healthy, and when it goes out of control, it can lead to cancer.
Curbing disease
The study could contribute to the development of new drugs that stop cancerous cells multiplying and so prevent the spread of the disease.
Such treatments - known as anti-mitotic drugs - would have the potential to limit the side-effects associated with some chemotherapy drugs, such as damage to healthy nerve cells.
The development could also help optimise personalised chemotherapy treatments for individual cancer patients.
Powerful microscopes
Scientists carried out a series of experiments to study how various proteins involved in the control of cell division interact with each other.
They used high-resolution microscopy to view the cells in 3D and determine the position of each of the proteins.
Crucially, they were able to pinpoint how one key protein binds and triggers the activation of a further two key enzymes, each of which is involved with ensuring that cell division takes place correctly.
Better drugs
Both enzymes studied had previously been identified as targets for development of anti-cancer drugs.
The latest discovery adds to scientists’ understanding of how better drugs might be designed that stop the activity of both enzymes.
Cell division is a complex and tightly regulated process, and when it goes out of control this can lead to cancer. The greater our understanding of the proteins that control cell division, the better equipped scientists will be to design more effective treatments against cancer.
Mar Carmena
School of Biological Sciences
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