News Release

Cholesterol starvation kills lymphoma cells

How new experimental drug could work in other cancers with an appetite for cholesterol

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Northwestern University

  • Nanoparticle is first therapy to trigger this novel way to kill lymphoma cells
  • Drug is being developed for clinical trials
  • Drug selectively attacks cancer cells, leaves normal cells unharmed

CHICAGO --- Scientists at Northwestern Medicine have developed a novel therapy to trick cancer cells into gobbling up what they think is their favorite food - cholesterol - which actually triggers their destruction. What appears to them as a cholesterol-loaded particle is actually a synthetic nanoparticle that binds to the cancer cells and starves them to death.

Although the research looked at lymphoma cells, scientists say the new experimental drug from Northwestern could be effective in other cancers with a similar appetite for cholesterol, such as kidney and ovarian cancer.

The study was published this month in the Journal of Biological Chemistry and builds upon prior work published by the group.

"Our ability to identify the novel mechanism of cell death gets us closer to translation to the bedside, where we can use this approach in patients with lymphoma who are not responding to more standard therapy," said co-corresponding author Dr. Leo I. Gordon, the Abby and John Friend Professor of Cancer Research at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and a Northwestern Medicine physician. "These data also provide a rationale to extend these observations to other cholesterol-addicted cancers, such as ovarian and kidney cancer."

This new therapy may work because the scientists also demonstrated cholesterol metabolism is quite different in target cancer cells from that of normal cells. That enables the experimental drug to selectively attack and kill vulnerable cancer cells while leaving normal cells unharmed.

New therapies are urgently needed to treat up to 40% of lymphomas that are aggressive and do not respond to current therapies. Also, SCARB1, the target of the drug which is involved in keeping cholesterol balanced in the cell, is present on other cancer cells that share the same appetite for cholesterol.

"Our therapy targets cancer cells that are dependent upon cholesterol uptake and perturbs the overall balance of cholesterol in the cell," said co-corresponding author Dr. C. Shad Thaxton, an associate professor of urology at Northwestern. "We discovered the cell tries to compensate by turning off pathways it requires to stay alive. We hope that this novel mechanism may be a blueprint for targeting other types of cancer."

The synthetic biologic nanoparticle therapy is the first of its kind to target cancer cells, specifically modulate cell cholesterol metabolism, and then trigger this novel way to kill cells. In addition, the scientists show the drug is not toxic to normal cells that do not harbor the same disruptions in cholesterol metabolism as the cancer cells do.

For the study, Northwestern scientists demonstrated the efficacy of the experimental drug and how it works in human cancer cell models, in animal models and in cancer cells obtained from patients with lymphoma.

The group will continue development of the drug so they can apply to begin Phase I clinical trials in patients. They also initiated a process of scaling up production of the drug to conduct studies in larger animals.

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Gordon and Thaxton also are members of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University.

Other Northwestern authors include Jonathan S. Rink, Adam Yuh Lin, Kaylin M. McMahon, Andrea E. Calvert, Shuo Yang, Tim Taxter, Jonathan Moreira, Amir Behdad and Reem Karmali.

Thaxton, Gordon and McMahon are cofounders of a biotechnology company that licensed the HDL nanoparticle technology from Northwestern University.

This work was in part supported by grant T32HL094293 from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, grant R01CA167041 from the National Cancer Institute, both of the National Institutes of Health, and a Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center Support Grant.


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