It is well established that de-differentiation in cancer cells lead to increased malignancy and cancer-metastatic potential. Therefore, treating cancer by inducing cancer cell differentiation has been long haunted strategy for cancer biologists with little success in clinic, except few successful examples such as use of all-trans retinoic acid as differentiation therapy for acute promyelocytic leukemia.
One of the major impediment underlying failure of various differentiation therapies is due to the dynamic nature of epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT) and its reverse (MET) of cancer cells during tumor dissemination and metastatic outgrowth which underscores the possible weakness of epithelial re-differentiation strategies.
Here is a breakthrough study that demonstrates with strong body of evidences that cancer cell plasticity can directly be targeted and inhibited by a “trans-differentiation approach”, such as forced adipogenesis. Indeed, these findings using a therapeutic approach to target metastatic cancer cell by inducing them to become adipocytes (fat cells) show a great promise at least in pre-clinical studies.
https://www.cell.com/action/showPdf?pii=S1535-6108%2818%2930573-7
tumors metastasis health
https://www.cell.com/action/showPdf?pii=S1535-6108%2818%2930573-7
tumors metastasis health
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