High levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL), also known as the "good cholesterol," are thought to protect against heart disease. However, what's good for one disease may not be good for another. High levels of HDL have also been linked to increased breast cancer risks and to enhanced cancer
aggressiveness in animal experiments. Now, a team of researchers led by
Philippe Frank, Ph.D., a cancer biologist in the Department of
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at Thomas Jefferson University, has
shown that an HDL receptor found on breast cancer cells may be
responsible for this effect, proposing a new molecular target that could
help treat the disease.
"If we can block the activity of the HDL receptor in breast cancer, we
may be able to limit the harmful effects of HDL, while maintaining
levels that are beneficial for blood vessels," says Dr. Frank. The work
was published online in the journal Breast Cancer Research.
To study the effect of HDL on cancer cells at the molecular level, Dr.
Frank and colleagues exposed breast cancer cell lines to HDL and noticed
that signaling pathways involved in cancer progression were activated,
and that the cells began to migrate in an experimental model mimicking
metastasis.
The researchers then limited the expression of the HDL receptor called
SR-BI in the cells using silencing RNA to reduce the receptor's levels.
In response, the activities of the signaling pathways that promote tumor
progression were reduced. In addition, cells with fewer SR-BI receptors
displayed reduced proliferation rates and migratory abilities than
cells with normal SR-BI levels. Most importantly, reduced SR-BI levels
were associated with reduced tumor formation in a mouse model of
tumorigenesis. The researchers then blocked the SR-BI receptor in a
breast cancer cell line with a drug called BLT-1 and noticed reduced
proliferation and signaling via proteins linked to tumor formation.
This study supports the idea that HDL plays a role in the development of
aggressive breast cancers and that inhibiting its function via SR-BI in
breast cancer cells may stall cancer growth.
Additional studies will be needed to develop more specific drugs to
inhibit SR-BI. "Also, we need to understand what levels of cholesterol
are required by the tumor before trying to reduce or modify lipid levels
in cancer patients," says Dr. Frank. "We hope this study will lead to
the development of new drugs targeting SR-BI or cholesterol metabolism
and eventually preventing tumor progression," he adds.
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