The University of British Columbia
UBC - A Place of Mind
The University of British Columbia
Faculty of Medicine
  • Home
  • Admissions
  • About
    • Strategic Plan
    • Vision & Values
    • Land Acknowledgement
    • Indigenous Health
    • Leadership
    • Academic & Research Units
    • Campuses
    • Facts & Figures
    • Careers
    • Contact
  • News
    • Feature Stories
    • Pathways Magazine
    • The Next Big Question
  • Education
    • Programs
    • Faculty Development
    • Health Education Scholarship
    • Continuing Professional Development
  • Research
    • Priority Areas
    • Canada’s Immuno-Engineering and Biomanufacturing Hub
    • COVID-19 Clinical Research Coordination Initiative
    • Academy of Translational Medicine
    • Edwin S.H. Leong Centre for Healthy Aging
    • Centres & Institutes
    • National Prizes
  • Giving
    • Impact of Giving
    • By the Numbers
    • Ways to Give
    • Webinar Series
    • Contact Us
  • Prospective Students
  • Current Learners
    • Policies & Procedures
    • Respectful Environments, Equity, Diversity & Inclusion
    • Mistreatment Help
    • MD & Undergrad Research
    • Summer Student Research Program
    • Multidisciplinary Research Program in Medicine
    • Grad & Postdoc Education
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Clinical Faculty
    • Becoming Clinical Faculty
    • Appointment Policy & Compensation Terms
    • Teaching Tracking & Payment System
    • Services & Perks
    • Career Development
    • Awards
    • Celebrating Clinical Faculty
    • Advisory Council
    • Contacts
  • Alumni
» Home » News » Target healthy cells to stop brain cancer “hijack”: UBC study

Contact

Communications
UBC Faculty of Medicine
Email: communications.med@ubc.ca
Office: 604.822.2421

Target healthy cells to stop brain cancer “hijack”: UBC study

By jwong | August 12, 2015

New UBC research into brain cancer suggests treatments should target the cells around a tumor to stop it from spreading.

UBC research team Christian Naus, Wun Chey Sin and John Bechberger study glioma, the most aggressive form of adult brain cancer. Glioma has a median survival of about 15 months and a two-year survival rate of 30 per cent because it is difficult to completely remove cancer cells without compromising brain functions and chemotherapy and radiotherapy do not prevent the regrowth of remaining cancer cells.

Research team: Christian Naus, Wun Chey Sin and John Bechberger

Research team: Christian Naus, Wun Chey Sin and John Bechberger

With this new research, the team reveals an alternative route to rein in the glioma cancer cells. The cancerous cells mingle with astrocytes, a type of cell that regulates the environment in the brain to create favourable conditions for brain functions. The research team found that glioma cells can reprogram the astrocytes with little pieces of genetic code (microRNAs). Those codes act as master switches, turning specific sets of genes on and off.

“This is the first evidence that microRNA can go from glioma cells into astrocytes and reprogram them to provide an altered environment that stimulates tumor growth and invasion,” said Dr. Naus, a professor in the Department of Cellular & Physiological Sciences in the Life Sciences Institute and an investigator with the Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health.

“We should consider the possibility of creating a treatment that would temporarily modify the healthy astrocytes around the tumor so the cancer cells can’t hijack them,” said Sin, a research associate leading the glioma investigation in the Naus laboratory.

The findings were recently published in three related papers in the journals Oncogene and Oncotarget.

The research was also highlighted in a recent interdisciplinary project, “Fashioning Cancer: A Correlation Between Destruction and Beauty,” where images of brain cancer were used to highlight public awareness, as well as raise funds for cancer research.

Contact Information

Communications
UBC Faculty of Medicine
Email: communications.med@ubc.ca
Office: 604.822.2421
Faculty of Medicine
317 - 2194 Health Sciences Mall
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z3
Tel 604 822 2421
Website www.med.ubc.ca
Find us on
    
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Copyright |
  • Accessibility