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Professor Chun Peng leads research team uncovering how ovarian cancer resists chemotherapy

91亚色 researchers have zeroed in on a genetic process that may allow ovarian cancer to resist chemotherapy.

Researchers in the University鈥檚 studied a tiny strand of our genetic makeup known as a microRNA, involved in the regulation of gene expression. Cancer occurs when gene regulation goes haywire.

鈥淥varian cancer is a very deadly disease because it鈥檚 hard to detect,鈥 says biology Professor who co-authored the study. By the time it's diagnosed, usually it is in its late stages. And by that point there鈥檚 really no way to treat the disease. Even when the disease is discovered in its early stages, chemotherapy doesn鈥檛 always work,鈥 she says.

Right: Chun Peng

Peng was among a team of researchers that discovered a receptor, ALK7, that induces cell death in epithelial ovarian cancer cells. They have now discerned that microRNA 376c targets this crucial receptor, inhibiting its expression and allowing ovarian cancer cells to thrive.

Our evidence suggests that microRNA 376c is crucial to determining how a patient will respond to a chemotherapeutic agent,鈥 says Peng. 鈥淚t allows cancer cells to survive by targeting the very process that kills them off,鈥 she says.

In examining tumours taken from patients who were non-responsive to chemotherapy, researchers found a higher expression of microRNA 376c and a much lower expression of ALK7.

Peng believes that this research is a step towards being able to make chemotherapy drugs more effective in the treatment of the disease.

鈥淔urther study is needed, but ultimately if we can introduce anti-microRNAs that would lower the level of those microRNAs that make cancer cells resistant to chemotherapeutic drugs, we will be able to make chemotherapy more effective against ovarian cancer,鈥 Peng says.

She urges women to educate themselves about the risk factors and symptoms of the disease. For more information, visit .

Peng is a world expert in the area of ovarian cancer and the molecular basis of complications in pregnancy. Her research on chemo-resistance has also contributed to knowledge and prediction of pre-eclampsia, a pregnancy disorder that is a leading cause of maternal and perinatal complications and death.

The article, 鈥淢icroRNA 376c enhances ovarian cancer cell survival by targeting activin receptor-like kinase 7: implications for chemoresistance鈥, was published in the Journal of Cell Science.The study鈥檚 lead author, Gang Ye, is a research associate in Peng鈥檚 lab. Several trainees in Peng鈥檚 lab, as well as scientists in Toronto鈥檚 Sunnybrook Research Institute and in China also participated in the project.

The research was supported by an operating grant from the (CIHR) and a mid-career award to Peng from the Ontario Women鈥檚 Health Council/CIHR. Ye was supported in part by a fellowship from the Toronto Ovarian Cancer Research Network.

Republished courtesy of YFile 鈥 91亚色鈥檚 daily e-bulletin.