06/06/2025
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University have created a revolutionary protein “switch” that tricks cancer cells into manufacturing their own chemotherapy drugs, causing them to self-destruct while sparing healthy cells. Instead of delivering drugs directly to cancer cells, this method uses a harmless “prodrug” that only becomes activated inside cancer cells when the switch detects specific cancer markers.
The switch is made by combining two proteins: one that senses cancer markers and another from yeast that converts the inactive prodrug into a potent cancer-killing drug. When the switch detects cancer, it activates the drug inside that cell, turning the cancer cell into a drug factory that destroys itself.
To work, the switch must enter cancer cells either by delivering the protein itself or by inserting the gene that makes the protein, allowing the cancer cell’s own machinery to produce the switch. Afterward, patients receive the inactive chemotherapy prodrug, which becomes activated only inside cancer cells.
This new approach focuses on producing the drug inside cancer cells rather than just delivering it to them, which could kill more cancer cells while reducing harmful side effects on healthy tissue. Lab tests on human colon and breast cancer cells have shown promise, and animal testing is expected to start within a year. While still early, this technique offers a radically different way to attack cancer.