
Cancer's secret weapon to evade death
New research from UT Southwestern Medical Center in the United States is shedding light on why this is the case.
In a study published this month (July 2025) in the journal Nature , the researchers found that cancer cells steal fat-packed molecules from the bloodstream, allowing them to arm themselves with a potent antioxidant that shields them from death.
Tumours appear to do this by reeling in lipoproteins – mole-cules that carry fats and fat-soluble nutrients like vitamin E in the bloodstream – through sugar-coated molecules on their cell surface.
These sulphated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) allow cancer cells to fortify their cell membranes with vitamin E and avoid a form of cell death called ferroptosis.
Though clinical applications are still a way off, the study underscores how understanding cancer's metabolism could open new doors for treatment, said Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine associate professor of urology Dr Shad Thaxton, who was not involved in the study.
'I think this paper and others in the field (emphasise) the appreciation for ferroptosis as a mechanism to kill cancer cells – that mechanism of cell death is so intimately intertwined with cell metabolism,' he said.
'I think what's interesting for people is that metabolism has a really big impact on the potential vulnerability of cancer cells to specific therapies.'
Why cancer cells need fat
Cancers rewire their metabolism in ways that support their growing horde of destructive cells.
Some of this rewiring involves producing energy from glucose and acquiring cellular building blocks such as nucleic acids, proteins and lipids.
Amassing cellular building blocks is especially crucial since a tumour's uncontrolled growth lends to it creating a hostile microenvironment where there aren't enough nutrients and other resources, said UT Southwestern Medical Center's Children's Medical Center Research Institute assistant professor Dr Javier Garcia-Bermudez, who led the study.
Lipids are essential for a tumour to grow and progress.
The plasma membrane of each cell is a bilayer of lipids; as cancer cells swell in number, they have to source lipids from their immediate environment or make their own to maintain their plasma membranes.
Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez said that was the prevailing theory as to why lipids are so important to cancer.
Emerging research has since discovered that lipids may offer cancer cells more functional perks.
For example, a September 2024 study found that cancer cells use a type of lipid called sphingolipid to go into stealth mode, thus evading detection and destruction by the immune system.
Studies have also found lipids are somehow involved in ferroptosis, a type of cell death discovered in 2012.
A portmanteau of 'ferrous', the Latin word for iron, and apoptosis, the scientific word for programmed cell death, ferroptosis happens when a build-up of toxic molecules called oxidants and iron overwhelms a cell, causing it to essentially rust from the inside out.
'Oxidants damage the lipids that are forming the membranes (of) a cell,' Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez said.
'What's interesting is that cancer cells tend to produce more oxidants than normal cells,' he added, noting that there's been interest in understanding why some cancers are more susceptible to this type of damage and in using ferroptosis to kill cancer cells.
GAG-ging cancer cells
The crafty masters of survival that they are, cancer cells have devised ways to dodge ferroptosis.
Unraveling the reason why put Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez and his lab on a four-year journey of scientific inquiry.
One of the researchers' first findings, after screening 200 metabolic genes linked to cancer, was that an enzyme called glutathione peroxidase 4 was active in tumours.
This wasn't a new discovery: Studies have shown that this enzyme, which can stop lipids from degrading, plays a pivotal role in controlling ferroptosis.
When glutathione peroxidase 4 was erased from a cancer cell's genome, the tumour would die, unless it was given a drug blocking ferroptosis or fed lipoproteins.
'That was a clue that lipoproteins were somehow related to ferroptosis,' said study co-author and UT Southwestern Medical Center's Eugene McDermott Center for Human Growth and Development director Prof Dr Ralph DeBerardinis.
In a battery of experiments that included depriving cancer cells in petri dishes of lipoproteins and exposing them to different antioxidants, the full picture began to be unveiled.
Cancer cells were intercepting lipoproteins – particularly those bearing vitamin E, a fat-soluble antioxidant – from their surrounding environment.
Like a fisherman with a fishing line, cancer cells accomplished this not with the usual reels used to catch lipoproteins, but with the long, flowy sugar chains known as GAGs.
These molecules are attached to a cancer cell surface through another molecule called a proteoglycan.
When the scientists blocked the biochemical pathway responsible for manufacturing GAGs, this limited a lab-grown cancer cell's access to vitamin E and made it more vulnerable to ferroptosis.
In mice grafted with cancer cells, cutting off the pathway slowed tumour growth.
The researchers also examined 20 tumours donated by patients with clear cell renal carcinoma, the most common type of kidney cancer.
These tumours had higher levels of GAGs and vitamin E – about 15 times more of the latter – compared to normal kidney tissue.
Disrupting the biochemical pathway producing GAGs prevented kidney cancer cells from devouring vitamin E-laden lipoproteins, resulting in them dying by the iron hand of ferroptosis.
Much more to be done
Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez and Prof DeBerardinis caution that there is much more research to be done before their study's findings have any clinical application for treating cancer.
'We know that GAGS are on the surface, they speak to the lipoproteins and they affect the uptake of lipoproteins,' Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez said.
'But how mechanistically this happens, especially in the cancer cell, hasn't been shown before.
'If we understand how this works and we find molecular targets that maybe we can treat with drugs and block, then we have a way to specifically deplete vitamin E in the tumour.'
Prof DeBerardinis said that the research does not suggest any association between dietary vitamin E and cancer risk, or how vitamin E levels correlate with cancer patient outcomes.
Figuring out those possible connections would be points for future study.
In the short term, he said, these findings could be used to investigate whether tumours with higher levels of GAGs or stored vitamin E are linked to patient outcomes, such as survival rates or how well they respond to treatment.
Assoc Prof Thaxton said that there are currently no federally-approved cancer treatments in the US that incite ferroptosis.
His lab is conducting research into synthetic lipoproteins devoid of any lipid passengers – a Trojan horse without soldiers hiding inside.
The cancer cells expect to get the lipoproteins with fats like cholesterol and vitamin E, he said, but 'they end up dying of ferroptosis'.
'Our drug doesn't carry anything and it's through this mechanism by which you can kill the cell.'
For Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez and Prof DeBerardinis, their research efforts were like finding a needle in a haystack – one they hope to find more needles in.
'Our study is really exciting, but at the same time, it's a very basic discovery,' Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez said.
'It was incredible to discover something that people have not observed in cancer before, to understand why these tumours are so resistant. I'm super excited to keep working on this.' – By Miriam Fauzia/The Dallas Morning News/tca/dpa
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The Star
4 days ago
- The Star
Cancer's secret weapon to evade death
Fat isn't just a guilty pleasure – it is cancer's secret weapon. New research from UT Southwestern Medical Center in the United States is shedding light on why this is the case. In a study published this month (July 2025) in the journal Nature , the researchers found that cancer cells steal fat-packed molecules from the bloodstream, allowing them to arm themselves with a potent antioxidant that shields them from death. Tumours appear to do this by reeling in lipoproteins – mole-cules that carry fats and fat-soluble nutrients like vitamin E in the bloodstream – through sugar-coated molecules on their cell surface. These sulphated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) allow cancer cells to fortify their cell membranes with vitamin E and avoid a form of cell death called ferroptosis. Though clinical applications are still a way off, the study underscores how understanding cancer's metabolism could open new doors for treatment, said Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine associate professor of urology Dr Shad Thaxton, who was not involved in the study. 'I think this paper and others in the field (emphasise) the appreciation for ferroptosis as a mechanism to kill cancer cells – that mechanism of cell death is so intimately intertwined with cell metabolism,' he said. 'I think what's interesting for people is that metabolism has a really big impact on the potential vulnerability of cancer cells to specific therapies.' Why cancer cells need fat Cancers rewire their metabolism in ways that support their growing horde of destructive cells. Some of this rewiring involves producing energy from glucose and acquiring cellular building blocks such as nucleic acids, proteins and lipids. Amassing cellular building blocks is especially crucial since a tumour's uncontrolled growth lends to it creating a hostile microenvironment where there aren't enough nutrients and other resources, said UT Southwestern Medical Center's Children's Medical Center Research Institute assistant professor Dr Javier Garcia-Bermudez, who led the study. Lipids are essential for a tumour to grow and progress. The plasma membrane of each cell is a bilayer of lipids; as cancer cells swell in number, they have to source lipids from their immediate environment or make their own to maintain their plasma membranes. Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez said that was the prevailing theory as to why lipids are so important to cancer. Emerging research has since discovered that lipids may offer cancer cells more functional perks. For example, a September 2024 study found that cancer cells use a type of lipid called sphingolipid to go into stealth mode, thus evading detection and destruction by the immune system. Studies have also found lipids are somehow involved in ferroptosis, a type of cell death discovered in 2012. A portmanteau of 'ferrous', the Latin word for iron, and apoptosis, the scientific word for programmed cell death, ferroptosis happens when a build-up of toxic molecules called oxidants and iron overwhelms a cell, causing it to essentially rust from the inside out. 'Oxidants damage the lipids that are forming the membranes (of) a cell,' Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez said. 'What's interesting is that cancer cells tend to produce more oxidants than normal cells,' he added, noting that there's been interest in understanding why some cancers are more susceptible to this type of damage and in using ferroptosis to kill cancer cells. GAG-ging cancer cells The crafty masters of survival that they are, cancer cells have devised ways to dodge ferroptosis. Unraveling the reason why put Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez and his lab on a four-year journey of scientific inquiry. One of the researchers' first findings, after screening 200 metabolic genes linked to cancer, was that an enzyme called glutathione peroxidase 4 was active in tumours. This wasn't a new discovery: Studies have shown that this enzyme, which can stop lipids from degrading, plays a pivotal role in controlling ferroptosis. When glutathione peroxidase 4 was erased from a cancer cell's genome, the tumour would die, unless it was given a drug blocking ferroptosis or fed lipoproteins. 'That was a clue that lipoproteins were somehow related to ferroptosis,' said study co-author and UT Southwestern Medical Center's Eugene McDermott Center for Human Growth and Development director Prof Dr Ralph DeBerardinis. In a battery of experiments that included depriving cancer cells in petri dishes of lipoproteins and exposing them to different antioxidants, the full picture began to be unveiled. Cancer cells were intercepting lipoproteins – particularly those bearing vitamin E, a fat-soluble antioxidant – from their surrounding environment. Like a fisherman with a fishing line, cancer cells accomplished this not with the usual reels used to catch lipoproteins, but with the long, flowy sugar chains known as GAGs. These molecules are attached to a cancer cell surface through another molecule called a proteoglycan. When the scientists blocked the biochemical pathway responsible for manufacturing GAGs, this limited a lab-grown cancer cell's access to vitamin E and made it more vulnerable to ferroptosis. In mice grafted with cancer cells, cutting off the pathway slowed tumour growth. The researchers also examined 20 tumours donated by patients with clear cell renal carcinoma, the most common type of kidney cancer. These tumours had higher levels of GAGs and vitamin E – about 15 times more of the latter – compared to normal kidney tissue. Disrupting the biochemical pathway producing GAGs prevented kidney cancer cells from devouring vitamin E-laden lipoproteins, resulting in them dying by the iron hand of ferroptosis. Much more to be done Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez and Prof DeBerardinis caution that there is much more research to be done before their study's findings have any clinical application for treating cancer. 'We know that GAGS are on the surface, they speak to the lipoproteins and they affect the uptake of lipoproteins,' Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez said. 'But how mechanistically this happens, especially in the cancer cell, hasn't been shown before. 'If we understand how this works and we find molecular targets that maybe we can treat with drugs and block, then we have a way to specifically deplete vitamin E in the tumour.' Prof DeBerardinis said that the research does not suggest any association between dietary vitamin E and cancer risk, or how vitamin E levels correlate with cancer patient outcomes. Figuring out those possible connections would be points for future study. In the short term, he said, these findings could be used to investigate whether tumours with higher levels of GAGs or stored vitamin E are linked to patient outcomes, such as survival rates or how well they respond to treatment. Assoc Prof Thaxton said that there are currently no federally-approved cancer treatments in the US that incite ferroptosis. His lab is conducting research into synthetic lipoproteins devoid of any lipid passengers – a Trojan horse without soldiers hiding inside. The cancer cells expect to get the lipoproteins with fats like cholesterol and vitamin E, he said, but 'they end up dying of ferroptosis'. 'Our drug doesn't carry anything and it's through this mechanism by which you can kill the cell.' For Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez and Prof DeBerardinis, their research efforts were like finding a needle in a haystack – one they hope to find more needles in. 'Our study is really exciting, but at the same time, it's a very basic discovery,' Asst Prof Garcia-Bermudez said. 'It was incredible to discover something that people have not observed in cancer before, to understand why these tumours are so resistant. I'm super excited to keep working on this.' – By Miriam Fauzia/The Dallas Morning News/tca/dpa


New Straits Times
6 days ago
- New Straits Times
Astronomers observe birth of a solar system for first time
PARIS: Astronomers said Wednesday they had observed the moment when planets start forming around a distant star for the first time, revealing a process that sheds light on the birth of our own solar system. The new planetary system is forming around the baby star HOPS-315 – which resembles our own Sun in its youth – 1,300 light years from Earth in the Orion Nebula. Young stars are surrounded by massive rings of gas and dust called protoplanetary discs, which is where planets form. Inside these swirling discs, crystalline minerals that contain the chemical silicon monoxide can clump together. This process can snowball into kilometre-sized "planetesimals", which one day grow into full planets. In our home Solar System, the crystalline minerals that were the starter dough for Earth and Jupiter's core are believed to have been trapped in ancient meteorites. Now astronomers have spotted signs that suggest these hot minerals are starting to solidify in the disc surrounding HOPS-315, according to a new study in the journal Nature. "For the first time, we have identified the earliest moment when planet formation is initiated around a star other than our Sun," lead study author Melissa McClure of Leiden University in the Netherlands said in a statement. The minerals around the star were first spotted by the James Webb Space Telescope. Then the astronomers used the European Southern Observatory's ALMA telescope in Chile to find out exactly where the chemical signals were coming from. They discovered that these minerals are in a small portion of the disc which is similar to the asteroid belt that surrounds our Sun. This will allow scientists to watch the process that may have birthed our home planet. "We're seeing a system that looks like what our Solar System looked like when it was just beginning to form," said study co-author Merel van't Hoff of Purdue University in the US.


New Straits Times
08-07-2025
- New Straits Times
Alien planet lashed by huge flares from 'angry beast' star
SCIENTISTS are tracking a large gas planet experiencing quite a quandary as it orbits extremely close to a young star - a predicament never previously observed. This exoplanet, as planets beyond our solar system are called, orbits its star so tightly that it appears to trigger flares from the stellar surface - larger than any observed from the sun - reaching several million miles (km) into space that over time may strip much of this unlucky world's atmosphere. The phenomenon appears to be caused by the planet's interaction with the star's magnetic field, according to the researchers. And this star is a kind known to flare, especially when young. "A young star of this type is an angry beast, especially if you're sitting as close up as this planet does," said Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy astrophysicist Ekaterina Ilin, lead author of the study published in the journal Nature. The star, called HIP 67522, is slightly more massive than the sun and is located about 407 light-years from Earth in the constellation Centaurus. A light-year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km). This star and planet, as well as a second smaller gas planet also detected in this planetary system, are practically newborns. Whereas the sun and our solar system's planets are roughly 4.5 billion years old, this star is about 17 million years old, with its planets slightly younger. The planet, named HIP 67522 b, has a diameter almost the size of Jupiter, our solar system's largest planet, but with only five per cent of Jupiter's mass. That makes it one of the puffiest exoplanets known, with a consistency reminiscent of cotton candy (candy floss). It orbits five times closer to its star than our solar system's innermost planet Mercury orbits the sun, needing only seven days to complete an orbit. A flare is an intense eruption of electromagnetic radiation emanating from the outermost part of a star's atmosphere, called the corona. So how does HIP 67522 b elicit huge flares from the star? As it orbits, it apparently interacts with the star's magnetic field - either through its own magnetic field or perhaps through the presence of conducting material such as iron in the planet's composition. "We don't know for sure what the mechanism is. We think it is plausible that the planet moves within the star's magnetic field and whips up a wave that travels along magnetic field lines to the star. "When the wave reaches the stellar corona, it triggers flares in large magnetic field loops that store energy, which is released by the wave," Ilin said. "As it moves through the field like a boat on a lake, it creates waves in its wake," Ilin added. "The flares these waves trigger when they crash into the star are a new phenomenon. This is important because it had never been observed before, especially at the intensity detected." The researchers believe it is a specific type of wave called an Alfvén wave, named for 20th century Swedish physicist and Nobel Prize laureate Hannes Alfvén, that propagates due to the interaction of magnetic fields. The flares may heat up and inflate the planet's atmosphere, which is dominated by hydrogen and helium. Being lashed by these flares could blast away lighter elements from the atmosphere and reduce the planet's mass over perhaps hundreds of millions of years. "At that time, it will have lost most if not all the light elements, and become what's called a sub-Neptune - a gas planet smaller than Neptune," Ilin said, referring to the smallest of our solar system's gas planets. The researchers used observations by two space telescopes: NASA's TESS, short for Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite, and the European Space Agency's CHEOPS, short for CHaracterising ExOPlanet Satellite. The plight of HIP 67522 b illustrates the many circumstances under which exoplanets exist. "It is certainly no sheltered youth for this planet. But I am not sad about it. I enjoy diversity in all things nature, and what this planet will eventually become - perhaps a sub-Neptune rich in heavy elements that did not evaporate - is no less fascinating than what we observe today."