Like naked mole-rats (Heterocephalus gaber), blind mole-rats (of the genus Spalax) live underground in low-oxygen environments, are long-lived and
resistant1 to cancer. A new study demonstrates just how cancer-resistant Spalax are, and suggests that the adaptations that help these
rodents3 survive in low-oxygen environments also play a role in their
longevity4 and cancer resistance. The findings are reported in the journal Biomed Central: Biology.
"We've shown that, compared to mice and rats, blind mole-rats are highly resistant to
carcinogens(致癌物)," said Mark Band, the director of
functional5 genomics at the University of Illinois Biotechnology Center and a co-author on the study. Band led a previous analysis of
gene6 expression in blind mole-rats living in low-oxygen (hypoxic) environments. He found that
genes7 that respond to hypoxia are known to also play a role in aging and in suppressing or promoting cancer.
"We think that these three
phenomena8 are tied in together: the hypoxia
tolerance9, the longevity and cancer resistance," Band said. "We think all result from
evolutionary10 adaptations to a stressful environment."
Unlike the naked mole-rat, which lives in colonies in Eastern Africa, the blind mole-rat is a
solitary11 rodent2 found in the Eastern
Mediterranean12. Thousands of blind mole-rats have been captured and studied for more than 50 years at Israel's University of Haifa, where the animal work was conducted. The Haifa scientists observed that none of their blind mole-rats had ever developed cancer, even though Spalax can live more than 20 years. Lab mice and rats have a maximum lifespan of about 3.5 years and yet regularly develop spontaneous cancers.
To test the blind mole-rats' cancer resistance, the Haifa team, led by Irena Manov, Aaron Avivi and Imad
Shams13, exposed the animals to two cancer-causing agents. Only one of the 20 Spalax tested (an animal that was more than 10 years old) developed
malignant14 tumors after exposure to one of the carcinogens. In contrast, all of the 12 mice and six rats exposed to either agent developed cancerous tumors.
The team next turned its attention to fibroblasts, cells that generate extracellular factors that support and
buffer16 other cells. Previous studies of naked mole-rat cells have found that
fibroblasts(纤维母细胞) and their
secretions17 have anti-cancer activity. Similarly, the researchers at Haifa found that Spalax fibroblasts were efficient
killers18 of two types of breast cancer cells and two types of lung cancer cells.
Diluted19 and filtered liquid medium
drawn20 from the fibroblast cell culture also killed breast and lung cancer cells. Mouse fibroblasts, however, had no effect on the cancer cells.
To help explain these results, Band and his colleagues looked to the gene expression profiles obtained from their previous studies of blind mole-rats in hypoxic environments. The researchers had found that genes that regulate
DNA21 repair, the cell cycle and programmed cell death are differentially regulated in Spalax when exposed to normal, above-ground oxygen levels (21 percent oxygen) and conditions of hypoxia (3, 6 and 10 percent oxygen). These changes in gene regulation differed from those of mice or rats under the same conditions, the researchers found.
Spalax naturally have a
variant22 in the p53 gene (a transcription factor and known
tumor15 suppressor), which is identical to a cancer-related
mutation23 in humans, Band said. Transcription-factor genes code for proteins that regulate the activity of other genes and so affect an animal's ability to respond to its environment. The research group in Israel showed "that the Spalax p53 suppresses
apoptosis(细胞死亡) (programmed cell death), however enhances cell cycle arrest and DNA repair
mechanisms24," he said.
Hypoxia can damage DNA and contribute to aging and cancer, so mechanisms that protect against hypoxia -- by repairing DNA, for example -- likely also help explain the blind mole-rat's resistance to cancer and aging, Band said.
"So now we know there's
overlap25 among the genes that affect DNA repair, hypoxia tolerance and cancer suppression," he said. "We haven't been able to show the exact mechanisms yet, but we're able to show that in Spalax they're all related. One of the lessons of this research is that we have a new model animal to study mechanisms of disease, and possibly discover new
therapeutic26 agents."