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Health News Updated Mar 29, 2025

Study shows how resistance to chemotherapies may occur in some cancers

Researchers have discovered how mutations in the VPS35 protein can lead to chemotherapy resistance in certain cancers. The study highlights the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in cancer cell death and treatment response. Higher VPS35 levels were linked to better survival rates in ovarian cancer patients. These findings could help doctors predict which tumors may resist standard treatments.

New Delhi, March 29

US researchers have found how resistance to chemotherapies may occur in some cancers, an advance that could help pinpoint treatment-resistant tumours.

Chemotherapy resistance is a major challenge in cancer treatment. It occurs when cancer cells stop responding to chemotherapy, allowing the tumour to grow again.

The team from Mass General Brigham focused on a pathway that harnesses reactive oxygen species (ROS) to kill cancer cells. The study, published in the journal Nature, found that mutations to VPS35 -- a key player in this pathway -- can prevent chemotherapy-induced cell death.

“ROS play an important role in healthy and diseased cells, but pathways that sense and control cellular ROS levels are not well understood,” said corresponding author Liron Bar-Peled, of the Krantz Family Center for Cancer Research at the hospital.

“A clearer understanding of ROS could help us understand why chemoresistance occurs in some cases.”

Low concentrations of ROS are required for normal cell signalling, but higher levels of ROS can damage cells and contribute to diseases such as cancer and neurodegeneration.

Previous studies have shown that mitochondria play an important role in ROS production, but it has been unclear if ROS-sensing proteins influence the mitochondria. If they do, this could impact responses to some anti-cancer treatments.

To investigate the team screened cancer cells for ROS-sensing proteins that might contribute to chemoresistance.

They identified mutations that increased treatment resistance, and the team traced two of them to a protein called VPS35. Further studies showed that these mutations led to lowered ROS levels within the cell.

In addition, they analysed VPS35 expression levels in 24 patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC), who received treatment at MGCC. They noted that higher tumoral VPS35 levels were associated with improved treatment responses and overall survival rates.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sarah K.

This is fascinating research! My aunt went through chemo last year and it was heartbreaking when it stopped working. Hope these findings lead to better treatments soon. 🙏

Mike T.

Interesting study but I wish they'd included more than just ovarian cancer patients. Would be good to see if these findings apply to other chemo-resistant cancers too.

James L.

As a medical student, this ROS pathway research is exactly why I got into oncology. The more we understand these mechanisms, the better we can target treatments!

Priya R.

The part about mitochondrial involvement is crucial. We've known about ROS for years but connecting it to chemo resistance through VPS35 is groundbreaking. Can't wait to see clinical applications!

David M.

While this is promising, I'm concerned about how long it takes for lab discoveries to reach patients. My wife's oncologist says most studies take 5-10 years to translate to treatments.

Emma S.

The survival rate correlation is what gives me hope! More research like this could help doctors personalize treatments based on patients' tumor biology. #CancerResearch

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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