News Release

Researchers discover a mechanism that allows melanoma cancer cells to paralyze immune cells

Major achievement with far-reaching implications for treating deadly skin cancer

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Tel-Aviv University

Melanoma cells (green) are shown in co-culture with the patient’s own immune cells

image: 

Immune cells: Red cells are CD8 lymphocytes “killer” T cells and blue cells are CD4 lymphocytes “helper” T cells. The melanoma releases vesicles (small green dots) that stick to CD8 cells, blocking their ability to attack the cancer.

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Credit: Tel Aviv University.

Scientific breakthrough - published in Cell:

Researchers discover a mechanism that allows melanoma cancer cells to paralyze immune cells

A new international study led by the Gray Faculty of Medical & Health Sciences at Tel Aviv University finds: melanoma cancer cells paralyze immune cells by secreting extracellular vesicles (EVs), which are tiny, bubble-shaped containers secreted from a given cell. The research team believes that this discovery has far-reaching implications for possible treatments for the deadliest form of skin cancer.

Video link – Prof. Carmit Levy explains about the groundbreaking discovery

This dramatic breakthrough led by Prof. Carmit Levy of the Department of Human Genetics and Biochemistry at TAU's Gray Faculty of Medical & Health Sciences, in collaboration with research teams from Sheba Medical Center, the Weizmann Institute of Science, the University of Liège, the Technion, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Wolfson Medical Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, Hadassah Medical Center, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rabin Medical Center, Paris-Saclay University, and the University of Zurich. The study’s findings were published in the prestigious journal Cell.

Melanoma is the deadliest type of skin tumor. In the first stage of the disease, melanocytic cells divide uncontrollably in the skin's outer layer, the epidermis. In the second stage, the cancer cells invade the inner dermis layer and metastasize through the lymphatic and blood systems. In previous studies, Prof. Levy discovered that as they grow in the epidermis, melanoma cells secrete large extracellular vesicles (EVs) called melanosomes, which penetrate blood vessels and dermal cells, forming a favorable niche for the cancer cells to spread. The new study found that these vesicles also enable cancer cells to paralyze the immune cells that attack them.

“We began studying these vesicles,” says Prof. Levy, “and I noticed that on the vesicles membrane there was a ligand — a molecule that is supposed to bind to a receptor found only on immune cells called lymphocytes, specifically on lymphocytes that can kill cancer cells when coming into direct contact with them. I than hypothesis that this ligand latches onto lymphocytes that come to kill the melanoma. This was an innovative and odd idea and we start investigating it in the lab. When we got more and more evidence that this idea is correct, I spoke with colleagues around the world, and invited them to joined and contribute their expertise: from Harvard, from Sheba and from Ichilov's pathology department, from the Weizmann Institute, from Zurich, Belgium and from Paris — all came together in a joint effort to decipher the cancer's behavior. And the achievement is enormous: we discovered that the cancer essentially fires these vesicles at the immune cells that attack it, disrupting their activity and even killing them.”

Prof. Levy emphasizes that the remarkable discovery is promising however more work is require further in order to translate it into a new therapy. “We still have a great deal of work ahead of us, but it is already clear that this discovery can have far-reaching therapeutic implications,” says Prof. Levy. “It will enable us to strengthen immune cells so they can withstand the melanoma’s counterattack. In parallel we can block the molecules that enables vesicles to cling to immune cells, thereby exposing the cancer cells and making them more vulnerable. Either way, this study opens a new door to effective immunotherapeutic intervention.”

 
   

Link to the article:

https://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(25)01316-9

 

Video link – Prof. Carmit Levy explains about the groundbreaking discovery


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