Duke-NUS scientists uncover how physical activity may help protect older adults against cancer
Peer-Reviewed Publication
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 17-Jun-2026 05:15 ET (17-Jun-2026 09:15 GMT/UTC)
Researchers at MUSC Hollings Cancer Center and the University of Arizona have uncovered a previously unknown way that prostate cancer cells can survive treatment, helping explain why some therapies eventually lose effectiveness. The study, led by Noel Warfel, associate professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at MUSC, focused on PIM1, a protein that is active in many prostate cancers and has long been considered a promising drug target.
The team found that while existing PIM1 inhibitors successfully block the protein’s signaling activity, they also cause cancer cells to accumulate larger amounts of the PIM1 protein itself. The excess protein activates a separate survival pathway that helps cancer cells to withstand treatment. Specifically, PIM1 promotes a process called mitophagy, which allows cancer cells to remove damaged mitochondria, reduce oxidative stress and continue surviving despite therapy.
The findings suggest that simply inhibiting PIM1 may not be enough. Instead, researchers showed that completely degrading the protein could be a more effective strategy. Using an experimental drug known as PIMTAC, Warfel’s team removed PIM proteins from cancer cells rather than blocking their activity. In laboratory studies and mouse models, this approach increased oxidative stress in tumor cells and led to greater cancer cell death.
The discovery provides new insight into how prostate cancer develops treatment resistance and highlights a potential path toward more effective therapies. Beyond prostate cancer, the findings could have implications for other cancer types where PIM proteins play a role in tumor survival and drug resistance.