Equine Cloning May Shed Light
On Human Cancer Causes
May 29, 2003
MOSCOW, Idaho – The
same chemistry that led to the successful
cloning of a mule
at the University of Idaho this month also
may shed new light on the causes of specific
cancers in humans.
According to UI Professor
of Animal and Veterinary Science Gordon Woods,
leader of the UI-Utah
State University team that recently produced
the first mule
clone, the chemical changes necessary for the successful cloning provide new
insight about what influences cell growth and activity. In addition, Woods,
who also serves as director of the UI’s Northwest Equine Reproduction
Laboratory, said the horse provides a novel and effective model for studying
cancer metastasis and other age-onset diseases in humans.
“The mortality rate for horses
with metastatic cancer is 8 percent for all
cancers and 0 percent for prostate cancer.
By comparison, the mortality rate
in humans is approximately 24 percent for all cancers, of which 13 to 14 percent
are for prostate cancer,” Woods said. “The contrasts and similarities
between humans and horses at the cellular level provide a number of insights
about how the relationship of certain chemicals in the body affect both normal
and abnormal cell activity.”
Calcium – more importantly,
the relationship between the amount of calcium
within each cell and outside each cell – is
key. Members of the horse family have a lower amount of intracellular calcium
than humans and a correspondingly
slower rate of cell activity.
Woods said when his team first
started its cloning work in 1998, only a very
few of the
implants resulted in pregnancies, and none
of those progressed
past the four-week point. Based on new information provided by CancEr2,
a
private
corporation founded by Woods, the scientists agreed part of the problem
was the relatively slow rate of cell activity in members of the horse family.
Woods noted that the slow rate of cell activity may be why in vitro fertilization
doesn’t work in horses and may be why the cancer mortality rate among
horses is so low.
In July 2001, however, the team
supplemented the amount of calcium in the implanted
clones. “We increased the calcium in
the medium holding the embryos and saw a seven-fold increase in our week
two pregnancy rates,” Woods said. “We
produced 19 pregnancies; the first baby has been born, and two more pregnancies
are in the advanced stages.”
The team concluded that the increase
in calcium within the implanted clone cells directly impacted the speed
of cell division. Understanding
the role
of calcium in equine cell activity was a direct result of work conducted
by CancEr2. CancEr2 gifted the intellectual property to UI.
According to existing research, the amount of intracellular calcium
is higher than normal in humans with metastasizing cancer. According
to
Woods’ research,
the amount of intracellular calcium is below normal in horses. Within
CancEr2, Woods and his team have discovered a chemical that suppresses
intracellular
calcium. Abnormally high intracellular calcium is a root cause of abnormally
high cell activity in aged humans.
“
There are electrifying similarities between cancer metastasis and
embryo division,” said
Woods. He said he is working toward critical testing of the effects
of deficiencies in the suppressor in human clinical trials. “We’ve
identified a suppressor of intracellular calcium and believe its
deficiency is the root
cause of abnormally high intracellular calcium.”
Woods established
the Northwest Equine Reproduction Laboratory on the UI campus in
1986. He had come full circle, having completed
pre-veterinary
courses at
the UI in 1974. A few years later, he earned the D.V.M. degree
from Colorado State University.
Woods returned
to the Northwest briefly to practice veterinary
medicine then moved east to complete a residency in large animal
reproduction
at the University
of Pennsylvania under R. M. Kenney. Next, at the University of
Wisconsin, he became a student of O. J. Ginther, and completed
his master's
and doctor's degrees under his direction.
Woods' first faculty
assignment came in 1983 at the New York State
College of Veterinary Medicine where he originated
and
directed
Cornell's Laboratory
of Equine Embryo Biology. He left Cornell in 1986 to set up
the Northwest Equine Reproduction Laboratory
on the UI campus.
**************************************
CONTACTS: Bill Loftus or Kathy
Barnard, University Communications, (208)
885-6291, bloftus@uidaho.edu or kbarnard@uidaho.edu |