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Research: Aging and Your Risk for Blood Cancer

3 min read  |  May 30, 2019  | 
Disponible en Español |
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Aging is the single biggest unavoidable risk factor for cancer. We know that.

As people age, certain changes in blood forming stem cells may contribute to acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and possibly other blood cancers, a new study conducted by researchers at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine found.

While AML has long been linked to aging, scientists still don’t fully understand the mechanisms that go awry. The researchers wanted to test whether changes in the epigenome — molecular markers that help cells determine which genes get turned on and off — could play a key role in age-related blood cancers. They were particularly interested in understanding how different levels of epigenetic control change with aging.

“If you think of all the genetic material as hardware, the epigenome is the software of the cell, responsible for determining the cell’s behavior,” says Maria Figueroa, M.D., human genetics expert at Sylvester and lead of the study.

“As we age, there are significant changes, resulting in the epigenetic reprogramming of important regulatory components of the genome. Once this happens, they can’t do their jobs as well as they could when they were young.”

In the study, the investigators collected hemopoietic, or blood forming, stem cells (HSCs) from 41 people between 18 and 30, and 55 people between 65 and 75, none of whom had cancer. From there, they looked at epigenetic markers and gene expression levels in 59 donors (27 young and 32 old). The results showed thousands of such changes as HSCs age, profoundly impacting gene expression. In particular, these variations changed several genes that are essential for the normal functioning and differentiation of HSCs.

“Most notably, there’s a core set of changes that were reproducibly found among all individuals,” Dr. Figueroa said. “When those epigenetic changes affect certain genes, they put us at risk for malignant transformation.”

Many of these epigenetic changes affected regulatory regions of several transcription factors — proteins that control the expression of other genes. One of these, called KLF6, is important for blood formation and can be altered in AML.

The researchers also found that many of the changes seen were similar to those seen in cancer cells. Though ominous, that does not mean they will become cancerous. Dr. Figueroa notes that cells don’t exist in isolation. They live in a micro-environment — in this case, bone marrow. The health of that environment, as well as external factors such as environmental exposures or co-existence of other stressors, may contribute to their ultimate fate.

Not everyone who ages gets cancer, and not everyone who has these epigenetic changes, or even gene mutations, gets cancer, either.

Dr. Maria Figueroa

“We hope this study will lead to further research into age-related changes to identify which of these changes and which co-existing factors are really critical to put us at risk for cancer, and if there is anything we can do to intervene and stop those changes.”

The findings were published on May 13 in the journal Cancer Discovery. The study was funded by the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.


Originally written by Josh Baxt for Inventum.

Tags: blood cancer, Dr. Maria Figueroa, epigenetics, hem-onc

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