New MYC Protein Discovery Offers Targeted Cancer Treatment Without Hindering Normal Cell Growth

February 22, 2026
New MYC Protein Discovery Offers Targeted Cancer Treatment Without Hindering Normal Cell Growth
  • The MYC protein has separable functions: its growth-promoting activity and its immune-evasion mechanism can be disentangled, suggesting a therapeutic angle in which inhibiting MYC’s RNA-binding capacity could expose tumors to immune attack without blocking its transcriptional roles in normal cells.

  • Blocking the immune-evading pathway offers a more precise cancer strategy than shutting down MYC entirely, since MYC’s essential roles in normal cells make total inhibition problematic.

  • The RNA-binding region responsible for immune silencing is distinct from the growth-promoting domain, enabling selective targeting that could disable immune evasion while preserving normal cell division.

  • Under stress, MYC relocates from DNA to nascent RNA, forms multimers around double-stranded RNA and R-loops, and recruits the nuclear exosome to degrade problematic RNA and prevent immune activation.

  • MYC binds nascent RNA during stress, forms multimeric clusters, and recruits the exosome to remove RNA-DNA hybrids, suppressing innate immune warnings and aiding tumor evasion.

  • In cell culture, both wild-type MYC and an RNA-binding–deficient mutant can drive proliferation, but only the wild-type MYC suppresses innate immune gene sets tied to NF-κB and interferon pathways.

  • Future work will determine how immune-activating RNA-DNA hybrids exit the nucleus and how MYC’s RNA-binding activity shapes the tumor microenvironment, with clinical applications still years away.

  • Funding for the research came from Cancer Research UK, the Children Cancer Free Foundation (Kika), INCa, and an ERC Advanced Grant.

  • The RNA-binding region RBRIII in MYC drives multimerization and RNA degradation without altering transcriptional activation, central to the immune-silencing process.

  • In an orthotopic mouse model, tumors with normal MYC grew rapidly, while those with the RBRIII mutant regressed dramatically in immunocompetent mice, highlighting immune recognition as a key driver of tumor regression when MYC’s RNA-binding function is disrupted.

  • The findings, published in Cell on January 22, 2026, come from a team led by Martin Eilers with collaborators from JMU, MIT, and Würzburg University Hospital, under Cancer Grand Challenges KOODAC.

  • The Cell paper identifies a novel function of MYC in pancreatic cancer, acting as an invisibility switch that dampens innate immune signaling.

Summary based on 2 sources


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Sources

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