---BREAKAWAY CIVILIZATION ---ALTERNATIVE HISTORY---NEW BUSINESS MODELS--- ROCK & ROLL 'S STRANGE BEGINNINGS---SERIAL KILLERS---YEA AND THAT BAD WORD "CONSPIRACY"--- AMERICANS DON'T EXPLORE ANYTHING ANYMORE.WE JUST CONSUME AND DIE.---
Nanoparticles catch cancer cells that make it into the blood stream And then politely request that they die.
always pass shit OFF as good & Never,NEVER "think" about the "evil" on the "other" side of the coin ?? ..wanna bet that nazi daaaaaapa (DRAPA) ..."thinks" bout the t;other side ??? ya know nazis being nazis
More than nine in ten cancer-related deaths occur because of
metastasis, the spread of cancer cells from a primary tumor to other
parts of the body. While primary tumors can often be treated with
radiation or surgery, the spread of cancer throughout the body limits
treatment options. This situation could change if work done by Michael
King and his colleagues at Cornell University delivers on its promises,
as he has developed a way of hunting and killing metastatic cancer cells.
When diagnosed with cancer, the best news can be that the tumor is
small and restricted to one area. Many treatments, including
non-selective ones such as radiation therapy, can be used to get rid of
such tumors. But if a tumor remains untreated for too long, it starts to
spread. It may do so by invading nearby healthy tissue or by entering
the bloodstream. At that point, a doctor’s job becomes much more difficult.
Cancer is the unrestricted growth of normal cells, which occurs
because mutations in a normal cell cause it to bypass a key mechanism
called apoptosis (or programmed cell death) that the body uses to clear
old cells. However, since the 1990s, researchers have been studying a protein called TRAIL, which on binding to the cell can reactivate apoptosis. But so far, using TRAIL as a treatment of metastatic cancer hasn’t worked, because cancer cells suppress TRAIL receptors.
When attempting to develop a treatment for metastases, King faced two
problems: targeting moving cancer cells and ensuring cell death could
be activated once they were located. To handle both issues, he built
fat-based nanoparticles that were one thousand times smaller than a human hair and attached two proteins to them. One is E-selectin, which selectively binds to white blood cells, and the other is TRAIL.
He chose to stick the nanoparticles to white blood cells because it
would keep the body from excreting them easily. This means the
nanoparticles, made from fat molecules, remain in the blood longer and
thus have a greater chance of bumping into freely moving cancer cells.
There is an added advantage. Red blood cells tend to travel in the
center of a blood vessel, and white blood cells stick to the edges. This
is because red blood cells are lower density and can be easily deformed
to slide around obstacles. Cancer cells have a similar density to white
blood cells and remain close to the walls, too. As a result, these
nanoparticles are more likely to bump into cancer cells and bind their
TRAIL receptors.
King, with help from Chris Schaffer, also at Cornell University,
tested these nanoparticles in mice. They first injected healthy mice
with cancer cells; after a 30-minute delay, they injected the
nanoparticles. These treated mice developed far fewer cancers compared
to a control group that did not receive the nanoparticles.
“Previous attempts have not succeeded, probably because they couldn’t
get the response that was needed to reactivate apoptosis. With multiple
TRAIL molecules attached on the nanoparticle, we are able to achieve
this,” Schaffer said.
The work has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. While
these are exciting results, the research is at an early stage. Schaffer
said that the next step would be to test mice that already have a
primary tumor.
“While this is an exciting and novel strategy,” according to Sue
Eccles at London’s Institute of Cancer Research, “it would be important
to show that cancer cells already resident in distant organs (the usual
clinical reality) could be accessed and destroyed by this approach.
Preventing cancer cells from getting out of the blood in the first place
may only have limited clinical utility.”
But there is hope for cancers that spend a lot of time in blood
circulation, such as blood, bone marrow, and lymph node cancers. As
Schaffer said, any attempt to control the spreading of cancer is bound
to help. It remains one of the most exciting areas of research and
future cancer treatment. PNAS, 2014. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1316312111 (About DOIs). This article was originally published at The Conversation.
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