The University of Valencia participates in an international study that opens up new ways to stop the metastasis of melanoma

Research staff of the University of Valencia, the Health Research Institute INCLIVA and the Clinical Hospital of Valencia has participated in a study that opens up new opportunities and ways of study in the development of new biomarkers in cancer by discovering a type of genetic material that prevents cancer cells of the skin from acting at a distance and forming metastases.

7 de february de 2020

Research team participating in the study, belonging to the University of Valencia, the Institute of Health Research INCLIVA and the Clinical Hospital of Valencia.
Research team participating in the study, belonging to the University of Valencia, the Institute of Health Research INCLIVA and the Clinical Hospital of Valencia.

The study, developed in collaboration with the Langone Medical Center in New York, has been published this January in the prestigious journal Cancer Cell.

The research revolves around circular RNA, a type of ribonucleic acid (RNA) recently described. While most RNAs are linear molecules, some are made circular. Unlike most RNA, circular RNA (circRNA), instead of producing proteins, is part of complex regulatory systems whose functions remain unclear.

The publication, which includes both studies with cell cultures, with mouse animal models, and with tissue samples of human melanomas, is the first to show that the loss of a circARN called CDR1as favours tissue invasion and melanoma metastases. In fact, the analysis of human tissues carried out concludes that there is a remarkable relationship between low levels of CDR1as activity and a short patient survival.

Melanoma is the most aggressive skin cancer and a significant model to investigate the basis of metastasis. The main cause of death of patients with melanoma is the appearance of metastasis or aggressive spread of cancer cells and this is where the relevance of CDR1as resides.

The work has been developed by an international team led by Eva Hernando and Douglas Hanniford, from the Department of Pathology and the Interdisciplinary Melanoma Cooperative Group of the Langone Medical Center of the University of New York (NYU). Beatriz Sánchez, from the University of Valencia and the INCLIVA - who made a stay in the laboratory of the New York University of Eva Hernando with a grant from the Valencian Government - and Carlos Monteagudo, section chief of Pathology Anatomy of the University Clinical Hospital of Valencia and Professor of Pathological Anatomy of the University of Valencia, both from the INCLIVA Research Group on Cutaneous Cancer.

The importance of this study is twofold, as it not only reveals the functional, prognostic and predictive role that CDR1as has in patients with melanoma, but also places a focus on the fact that circular RNAs are key molecules for metastatic processes. In this sense, Eva M. Hernando states that this study “provides new knowledge about the aggressive behaviour of melanoma and is the first to show evidence that a circular RNA can act as a suppressor molecule of metastasis”.

“We discovered that this circARN, called CDR1as, slows a known procancerous protein called IGF2BP3 and reveals a new function of CDR1as that may have therapeutic implications”, adds the first author of the article, Douglas Hanniford.

Currently, there is still a critical need for cancer patients to identify who will have a higher risk of developing metastases. In addition, for patients with advanced disease, having biomarkers capable of predicting what their response to therapy will be would be of great help for a selection of the most appropriate, effective and personalised treatment. In this sense, the amount of CDR1as represents a valuable biomarker applicable to melanoma and other types of tumours.

The work has obtained funding from the Carlos III Health Institute of the Ministry of Science and Innovation, the European Regional Development Funds (ERDF) and the Department of Education, Culture and Sports of the Valencian Community, through its support for the promotion of scientific research, technological development and innovation.

Free access to the publication (until March 3):

https://authors.elsevier.com/c/1aOhW_YwcvlMDH

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