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Research discovers molecule that can switch off cancer

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Published Date: 12 March 2010
SCIENTISTS have found a "switch" that can turn off cancer without the side effects of chemotherapy.
Researchers have found a molecule that actually triggers cell death, and they are confident it can be developed into a treatment for cancer and other illnesses.

They found that the molecule called caspase, which was already well known for killing
cells, could be used to target specific cancerous ones.

If the finding can be turned into a treatment it would be a dramatic improvement on chemotherapy which kills healthy cells and well as the cancerous cells to treat the disease.

The study, from the University of Colorado, was published in the 12 March issue of Science. Professor Ding Xue, who led the five-year study, said: "Our findings initially seemed too good to be true.

"We wound up looking at the results from a number of angles, including genetics, cell biology and biochemistry.

"Eventually we reached the only logical conclusions we could make."

He added: "This is a completely novel finding, and all of the players in this story are well-known, well studied aspects of a very important process in our lives.

"The minute I saw the results, I knew it was a very, very important finding with wide implications."

The experiments were undertaken on a common, eyelash-sized nematode known as Caenorhabditis elegans, a popular laboratory organism for genetic and biomedical experiments.





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  • Last Updated: 11 March 2010 10:16 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Cancer research
 
1

Kate,

Zurich 12/03/2010 08:52:11
Pray that it works!
2

english charlie,

12/03/2010 17:53:09
I also hope it works as chemotherapy isn't very safe.

3

Carolyn Spammer,

18/03/2010 01:43:13
I doubt it.

 

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