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Cancer often results in weight loss due to unwanted metabolic complications. This so-called cancer cachexia is accompanied by a poor prognosis with regard to disease progression, quality of life, and mortality. After sepsis, cachexia is the most frequent cause of death in cancer patients. It is not entirely clear which biochemical mechanisms play a role. To date, there have also not been any pharmacological possibilities for selectively influencing tumor-associated wasting syndrome.

 

Researchers at the Institute for Diabetes and Cancer (IDC) at Helmholtz Zentrum Munchen in Germany have identified the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) as the central enzyme in cancer cachexia (Nature Medicine, 2016; DOI: 10.1038/nm.4171). AMPK is normally responsible for protecting cells from energy deficiency. In the case of cancer cachexia, however, AMPK activity is inhibited due to the illness, resulting in a pointless waste of the body's own energy store.

 

Selective AMPK reactivation was successfully carried out in tumor models. The therapeutic manipulation took place through a specific peptide which prevents the interaction between AMPK and the lipid droplet-associated protein Cidea, and which consequently can stop the increased fat breakdown (lipolysis) found in tumor diseases.

 

"Our data suggest that the preservation of 'healthy' adipose tissue can promote not only the quality of life, but also the response to treatment and the survival of cancer patients," said Stephan Herzig, IDC Director. "The interaction between AMPK and Cidea can be taken as a starting point for developing new lipolysis inhibitors which could then prevent the breakdown of energy stores in the fat of tumor patients." He furthermore sees possibilities for transferring the acquired insights to other wasting disorders, such as with sepsis or burn injuries.