Breeding Cancer-Proof Mice 43
Bob Vila's Hammer writes "In an article at New Scientist, research scientists at the Wake Forest University School of Medicine in North Carolina have been able to breed a cancer-proof mouse. The lucky new finds, some 700 cancer-proof mice, have the ability to destroy numerous different kinds of cancer cells in their bodies very efficiently without the use of T-cells (white blood cells). Instead the body's innate immune system attacks the tumor cells and ruptures them with neutrophils and macrophages. What is so astounding within early findings is that the power of these mice to resist cancer seems to be unlimited and as well, a genetic trait able to be passed down to further generations without the negative results of previous mouse breeds with autoimmune diseases."
This is great, but I wonder... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This is great, but I wonder... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:This is great, but I wonder... (Score:5, Informative)
Unfortunately, our body's mechanisms aren't quite good enough. But by that point in our life, we've already reproduced, and evolution can no longer help us.
Re:This is great, but I wonder... (Score:2)
Fortunately with our increased understanding of human genetics we could step over this prob
Re:This is great, but I wonder... (Score:2, Insightful)
Or perhaps cancer works to hone out weak immune systems. Should people with we
Re:This is great, but I wonder... (Score:5, Interesting)
As another poster noted, we do have resistances to cancer. It is only when these mechanisms are overridden that cancer develops. One could say that medical science is just another mechanism that we have evolved to protect ourselves from cancer and other threats. Medicine is the result of our intellect, an evolution which has done great things for us so far.
Hmm...heredity? (Score:2)
Re:Hmm...heredity? (Score:1)
Germline alteration is just too risky.
Re:Hmm...heredity? (Score:2)
Germline alteration is too risky with current techniques, but why shouldn't we want to incorporate this trait into our genome and make it inheritable?? If it were shown to have no great ill effects and would greatly increase the human lifespan and quality of life... then why not go for it?
Conversly, Why take the risk that the anti-cancer factory is going to burn down with all the anti-cancer researchers inside? Just build this into our genome and then as long a
virii instead of mice? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:virii instead of mice? (Score:4, Informative)
Cancer proof mice (Score:1, Funny)
2033 AD (Score:4, Funny)
Seriosuly, though...I lost a parent to cancer at a young age, so it'd be nice to see some solid progress on this front.
-psy
Re:2033 AD (Score:1)
More news at 11.
Great (Score:2)
Cancer-proof mice/rats? Bad news... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Cancer-proof mice/rats? Bad news... (Score:1)
Re:Cancer-proof mice/rats? Bad news... (Score:5, Informative)
a) they are kept in clean cages and cared for so that they live for years beyond their 'normal' lifespan,
b) researchers deliberately induce tumour formation, and/or
c) the mice have been bred (or genetically altered a la Harvard mouse) specifically to be susceptible to cancer.
Re:Cancer-proof mice/rats? Bad news... (Score:2)
By that logic then the only reason why cancer is a problem in humans is because we are living longer than "normal". I guess that makes sense though, since we didn't always live well into our 70's.
So then the solution for humans is either selective breeding programs or genetic manipulation? or maybe we creat a lifespan law. Anyone who lives to see the age of say...65 has 5 years to live before they are "put to sleep" as they say in the animal welfare biz.
Those are some scary ideas, b
Re:Cancer-proof mice/rats? Bad news... (Score:2)
It's one of the perqs of being a predator. If you're at the top of the food chain, you get to die of natural causes. Also, from the standpoint of evolution, anything that happens to us after age thirty-five, health-wise, is totally irrelevant because it won't interfere with our ability to
Re:Cancer-proof mice/rats? Bad news... (Score:1)
Re:Cancer-proof mice/rats? Bad news... (Score:1)
Re:Cancer-proof mice/rats? Bad news... (Score:1)
Unfortunately it died because she forgot to feed it, rather than from the cancer.
This + Harvard Mouse (Score:4, Funny)
Re:This + Harvard Mouse (Score:1)
The cause (Score:3, Interesting)
Most of the mice that are the subject of cancer research are "Harvard mice". As a previous post noted normal mice dont have to worry about cancer, because they get eaten before getting old enough to have cancer. So, normal mice evolve in ways to evade predators.
For the "Harvard mice" the only threat is cancer. So maybe those mice have finaly evolved to avoid the only thing that is a threat to them: cancer.
One small step for man... (Score:2)
Lifespan of these mice (Score:1)
Re:Lifespan of these mice (Score:2)
I heard the interview with the scientist on the As It Happens Radio show yesterday on the SF school dist public radio. It's pretty good actually.
As It Happens is a Canadian news show. You can find it by going to NPR.org and searching the show forums.
Genetic Retrofitting? (Score:1)
There is no need for this (Score:1)
Ummm, no (Score:2)
What follows is pure Zavatonian speculation based on my observations.
Cancer is whathappens when a cell forgets how to be a specialized cell and how to die. It is one of the things that can happen when the blueprints to make the cell become seriously damaged. By blueprints, I mean the DNA and/or RNA. A cancerous cell is an unspecialized cell that proceeds with a