Tracking Melanoma Metastasis Leads to Key Gene Discovery
Source: University of Rochester Medical Center, February 2016
A Wilmot Cancer Institute investigator discovered a gene that’s required for the initiation of melanoma and the growth of disseminated melanoma cancer cells in the lungs.
The findings suggest that the gene’s signaling pathway may be proof that melanoma stem cells exist, a question that’s being debated by scientists.
Lei Xu, Ph.D., associate professor of Biomedical Genetics at the University of Rochester Medical Center, is lead author of the study, which was recently published in PLOS ONE and funded by a Wilmot Cancer Institute pilot grant. The Xu lab investigates the multiple, complex steps that occur as cancer cells spread from the original tumor to other parts of the body.
Sometimes metastatic cells can remain dormant for months or years before they’re detected. Scientists have been debating whether metastatic melanoma cells possess stem cell properties, as illustrated by their ability to survive, expand, and initiate new tumors in distant places.