Gray hair yielding cancer clues,
researchers find
WASHINGTON (AP) — No doubt many researchers have gotten
gray hair trying to find ways to defeat cancer. Now a team of scientists
says gray hair itself may yield clues to fighting that deadly disease.
It turns out that melanoma, the most
dangerous type of skin cancer, involves melanocytes, the cells that help color
hair and skin.
So researchers at the Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute in Boston decided to investigate what happens when these cells
become depleted, allowing hair to go gray.
"Preventing the graying of hair is not
our goal," said senior researcher Dr. David Fisher. "What we really want is to
come up with treatments for melanoma."
The scalp contains a reservoir of
adult stem cells that provide a continuous supply of these color-making cells,
they found. But as the body ages, these cells become depleted and sometimes
begin to develop in the wrong part of the hair follicle.
The research, published online
Thursday by the journal Science, originally focused on mice. But the team also
studied human scalp tissue at various ages and found a similar pattern of cell
depletion.
It was known that the pigment was not
well transferred into gray hair, but the actual mechanism had not been
understood, Emi K. Nishimura, a co-author of the paper, said in a telephone
interview.
She said a gene called Bcl 2 is
essential to maintain melanocytes. The researchers found that when they raised
mice lacking this gene the animals went gray quickly and dramatically shortly
after birth.
Fisher suggested that people who get
gray prematurely may have a mutation of this gene.
The question they now want to answer
is why the melanocyte cells begin dying off as the body ages.
These cells are generally good at
surviving, being able to live through ultraviolet radiation — at the beach, for
example — that would kill many other cells. That can be good when people go out
in the sun, because the melanocytes produce pigment that protects the skin.
Unfortunately, they retain that
ability to survive when they become cancerous, Fisher said.
So, he said, the researchers wondered
if they could find a back door to killing the cells by studying how they die
naturally, and that's what led to their research on graying.
By understanding how genes like Bcl 2
protect the cells, what pathways they act on, Fisher said, the scientists can
look for ways to block that action with a drug.
"We have a number of ideas ... the
work is moving," Fisher said. "I cannot say that we have drugs in our hands, but
we have targets."
The American Cancer Society expects
about 55,100 people to be diagnosed this year with melanoma, the most serious
form of skin cancer, with an estimated 7,910 deaths.
Melanoma can be cured when it is
detected and treated early, but if the lesion penetrates deeply into the skin it
is often fatal. Sun exposure is a major risk factor in the disease, which has
been increasing in the past few decades.
The research was supported by the
National Institutes of Health, the Charles A. King Trust of Fleet National Bank
and The Medical Foundation.
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