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Date: Monday Aug. 2, 2010 4:05 PM ET

Researchers led by University of British Columbia researcher Neil Cashman say they've made a surprise find about human cancer and brain-wasting diseases in animals that could pave the way for vaccines to halt all the diseases.

Cashman, a neurologist and researcher, was working on therapies for preventing transmissible spongiform encephalopathies, a group of animal brain-wasting diseases that include BSE in cows, scrapie in sheep, and chronic wasting disease in deer and other cervids.

Though the illnesses each affect different animals they are all caused by prions, which are unique infectious agents that cause the normal prion protein to go "rogue."

Cashman explains that a protein is a chain of amino acids that only acquires its function by being folded properly. When a prion protein becomes misfolded after contact with another misfolded prion protein, it exposes certain regions in the normal prion protein, technically called "epitopes".

His team had identified a group of antibodies they thought could target these epitopes, and thus halt the disease. But in order to test the antibodies, using a technique called "immunostaining," they needed a line of easy-to-grow, regular cells to act as "negative controls."

"And lo and behold, we found a few that stained intensely with these antibodies," Cashman explained to CTV.ca.

Quite to Cashman's surprise, some of the cancer cell lines reacted to the same antibody he was testing on prion-infected brain cells.

"We realized that if these [cancer] tumour cells stain for these antibodies, [the epitopes] could be a target for cancer immunotherapies," Cashman said.

"We spent months trying to disprove the findings, thinking perhaps it was some kind of mistake. And eventually, we proved to our satisfaction that this antibody staining was real."

He says teams at UBC and B.C. Cancer Research Centre are now testing how these antibodies can be used to develop a vaccine to treat cancer in mice.

If all goes well, it's possible a vaccine could one day be tested on human cancers too, though Cashman cautions these are still "very early days."

One aspect that makes dreams of a vaccine against cancer exciting is that the therapy would target only "misfolded" prion proteins, while sparing normal prion proteins. So unlike chemotherapies that kill off healthy cells along with cancer, therapies that target misfolded prion protein would attack only rogue cells, sparing the healthy ones.

Cashman said it's possible that the same immunotherapy could also work in human prion diseases, such as "mad cow disease" and classical Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease – but only if there were a way to identify infections in their earliest stages, before the illness caused symptoms.

"CJD is a very rapidly progressive disease, so by the time you make a definitive diagnosis, usually the patient has only a few weeks to live," Cashman explained.

"Perhaps if we had a good diagnostic for the incubating phase [of CJD], then yes, it's possible that a vaccine against these epitopes could block the infection before it gets to the brain. But that's theoretical," he said.

This new area of research is being funded under PrioNet Canada's Bootstrap program and with the assistance of two industry partners: Amorfix Life Sciences Ltd.; and Saskatoon-based PREVENT – the Pan Provincial Vaccine Initiative.

Cashman is the scientific founder and board member of Amorfix, and is the scientific director of PrioNet Canada.

Comments are now closed for this story

Craig in Calgary
said

I think people are far too jaded. I'm sure that people thought the same things about other diseases that have been virtually removed. I.E. Polio. There will always be a disease that threatens mankind that drug companies can use to capture profits. I don't think the cure to cancer is being withheld. Imagine the profits from a worldwide vaccination program.


mrbob_58
said

As long as cancer research is an endless flow of money there will never be a cure. It sounds cruel , but it is reality. If they cure it , the drug will only be profitable to the company until the patent runs out and the generics take over. I believe the cure already exsists. Locked away in some safe, never to see the light of day. It would kill the cash flow of many many companies out there. That, by todays corperate standards, would be a fate worse than death.


Dave in MB
said

Sadly, I think B. Kelly is 'right on the money'. As the old saying goes, follow the money. Obscene profits will win the day every time.


sue
said

The only way to prevent cancer is vitamin B 17. Just from apricot seeds, apple seeds, all the research in the world won't prevent cancer.

island girl
said

The key to cancer, I believe, is to go right to the root....the malformed proteins. So I think they are definitely on the right track. How long would the effects of a vaccine endure? Could one envision being vaccinated while a toddler (before the symptoms of any cancer, even leukemia) and use it as a prevention rather than a cure. Maybe boosters throughout life? It's wonderful such discoveries are being made right here at UBC...


B. Kelley, Ontario
said

I would like to hope that a cure for cancer is right around the corner but, call me jaded, there is far more money to be made from treatments than there is from a cure. Pharmaceutical companies make tremendous profits from selling drugs that treat chronic or long term medical conditions. Those companies hold a great deal of influence with government authorities, especially in the U.S. Cancer drugs are particularly profitable. I question whether an actual cure or preventive drug would ever be allowed into the marketplace that would immediately supplant all those profitable products. I will keep hoping but I'm not holding my breath.


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