Impact on cancer treatment
"This discovery uncovers many new research questions, which is usually the case in fundamental research," says Thijn. "We have demonstrated our discovery in lab-grown cancer cells, but many important questions remain: Where and when does this pathway occur in patients? How does it affect immunotherapy or chemotherapy? Does it affect the side effects of cancer therapy? If this form of cell death also proves to play a significant role in patients, this finding will have implications for cancer treatments. These are important questions to investigate further."
This research was financially supported by KWF Dutch Cancer Society, Oncode Institute, and Health Holland.
Group leader Thijn Brummelkamp is an Oncode Institute scientist, and is associate professor at UMC Utrecht and co-founder of Scenic Biotech.
Turning off genes, one by one
People have thousands of genes, many of which have functions that are unclear to us. To determine the roles of our genes, researcher Thijn Brummelkamp developed a method using haploid cells. These cells contain only one copy of each gene, unlike the regular cells in our bodies that contain two copies. Handling two copies can be challenging in genetic experiments, because changes (mutations) often occur in just one of them. This makes it difficult to observe the effects of these mutations.
Together with other researchers, Brummelkamp has been unraveling processes that are crucial in disease for years using this versatile method. For example, his group recently discovered that cells can make lipids in a different way than previously known. They uncovered how certain viruses, including the deadly Ebola virus, manage to enter human cells. They delved into cancer cell resistance against specific therapies and identified proteins that act as brakes on the immune system, which is relevant to cancer immunotherapy. Over the last years, his team discovered two enzymes that had remained elusive for four decades, and that turned out to be vital for muscle function and brain development.