Swiss researchers discover mechanism by which cancer cells manipulate neighboring healthy cells through mitochondrial transfer, opening new therapeutic possibilities.

"The cancer cells actually utilise a mechanism that is advantageous for injuries for their own purposes. This allows them to grow into a malignant tumour."
"MIRO2 blockade worked in the test tube and in the mouse model. Whether it also works in human tissue is still unresearched."
Cancer is a master manipulator, and ETH Zurich has just exposed its latest trick. In a groundbreaking study published in Nature Cancer, Swiss researchers have confirmed that malignant cells do not merely coexist with healthy tissue—they actively enslave it. The research team, led by Sabine Werner, discovered that skin cancer cells physically reprogram their neighbors to fuel their own expansion. This is not passive growth; it is an aggressive biological coup.
The mechanism is as elegant as it is deadly: cancer cells transfer their own "energy power plants"—mitochondria—into surrounding healthy cells. Once infected with these foreign engines, the healthy cells are forced into overdrive, churning out energy and growth substances that the tumor consumes to accelerate its spread. This discovery fundamentally shifts our understanding of tumor microenvironments. We are no longer looking at a tumor fighting alone, but one that conscripts the body's own resources to build its empire.
What makes this discovery particularly chilling is that the cancer is exploiting a mechanism designed to save lives. The transfer of mitochondria is a biological emergency response normally reserved for healing catastrophic injuries. For instance, following a stroke, healthy nerve cells will donate their mitochondria to damaged cells to ensure their survival. It is an act of cellular altruism.
However, cancer twists this survival instinct into a weapon. "The cancer cells actually utilise a mechanism that is advantageous for injuries for their own purposes," explains Sabine Werner. By triggering this response in the absence of injury, the tumor tricks healthy tissue into a state of emergency production. The healthy cells believe they are aiding in repair, but in reality, they are feeding a malignancy. This revelation underscores the terrifying adaptability of cancer—it does not just break the rules of biology; it rewrites them to serve its own lethal agenda.
Crucially, the ETH Zurich team has moved beyond mere observation to identify the tactical weakness in this process: the protein MIRO2. This protein acts as the logistical key, facilitating the transport of mitochondria across cellular borders. Without MIRO2, the supply line is cut. The researchers found evidence that this dependency is not limited to skin cancer but likely extends to breast and pancreatic cancers as well, widening the potential impact of this finding.
In laboratory settings, the results were decisive. When the researchers blocked the MIRO2 protein, the mitochondrial transfer ceased. "MIRO2 blockade worked in the test tube and in the mouse model," Werner confirmed. By severing this connection, the tumor is deprived of the external support system it relies on for rapid expansion. This identification of a specific protein target transforms a biological mystery into a tangible engineering problem—one that Swiss science is now poised to solve.
While the blockade of MIRO2 represents a significant victory in the lab, the transition to clinical reality remains a formidable challenge. The leap from mouse models to human tissue is fraught with complexity. "Whether it also works in human tissue is still unresearched," Werner cautions, tempering expectations with scientific rigor. We are likely years away from a commercially available treatment derived from these findings.
Nevertheless, the path forward is clear. If this protein blockade can be replicated in humans, it offers a revolutionary new pillar for cancer therapy—attacking the tumor's supply lines rather than just the tumor itself. ETH Zurich has once again demonstrated why it stands at the vanguard of global medical research. By exposing how cancer weaponizes our own biology, they have handed the medical community a blueprint to disarm it. The war on cancer is far from over, but today, we know the enemy's strategy a little better.