Method For Fooling Cancer Cells Into Fat Cells Can Stop Cancer's Spread (technologynetworks.com) 83
Researchers from the University of Basel in Switzerland have discovered that they can prevent the formation of metastases by fooling breast cancer cells into fat cells. The proof-of-concept study was published in the journal Cancer Cell. Technology Networks reports: Malignant cells can rapidly respond and adapt to changing microenvironmental conditions, by reactivating a cellular process called epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), enabling them to alter their molecular properties and transdifferentiate into a different type of cell (cellular plasticity). Cancer cells can exploit EMT -- a process that is usually associated with the development of organs during embryogenesis -- in order to migrate away from the primary tumor and form secondary metastases. Cellular plasticity is linked to cancer survival, invasion, tumor heterogeneity and resistance to both chemo and targeted therapies. In addition, EMT and the inverse process termed mesenchymal-epithelial transition (MET) both play a role in a cancer cell's ability to metastasize.
Using mouse models of both murine and human breast cancer the team investigated whether they could therapeutically target cancer cells during the process of EMT -- whilst the cells are in a highly plastic state. When the mice were administered Rosiglitazone in combination with MEK inhibitors it provoked the transformation of the cancer cells into post-mitotic and functional adipocytes (fat cells). In addition, primary tumor growth was suppressed and metastasis was prevented. Since both drugs used in the preclinical study were FDA-approved the team are hopeful that it may be possible to translate this therapeutic approach to the clinic.
Using mouse models of both murine and human breast cancer the team investigated whether they could therapeutically target cancer cells during the process of EMT -- whilst the cells are in a highly plastic state. When the mice were administered Rosiglitazone in combination with MEK inhibitors it provoked the transformation of the cancer cells into post-mitotic and functional adipocytes (fat cells). In addition, primary tumor growth was suppressed and metastasis was prevented. Since both drugs used in the preclinical study were FDA-approved the team are hopeful that it may be possible to translate this therapeutic approach to the clinic.
Fooling ... into?!?!?! (Score:1)
English as a fifteenth language, or just the vocabulary of a screaming monkey?
Fooling? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think they mean 'turning'.
Fascinating science in the actual article - really odd use of language in the article. 'Fooling' is kind of anthropomorphizing the cancer cells - they're changing based on mechanisms, they never really make decisions to be fooled on, and that's why the actual study doesn't really use the word.
Ryan Fenton
Hacking (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Hollywood saw to that. And it's the law now: "Computer hacking" is criminal, even though the law doesn't say what "hacking" is. Since this "hacking" indubitably involves computers somehow, it must be "computer hacking" and therefore criminal. Don't go "but the law doesn't mean that" on me, you doofus. If the prosecutor feels like it, he can use it that way. That makes it bad law, but it is a law in force, and thus almost anything anyone would care to call "hacking" can get prosecuted.
You can thank the security s'kiddies for that. And hollywood.
Since I can turn on a television and watch TV shows promoting how to Hack My Life, I'm not really inclined to believe your bullshit Hollywood representation of what the general public has obviously accepted when it comes to hacking. There are plenty of legitimate job titles and even computer certifications that contain the term/title "Hacker", so drop the drama already. A few billion people using computers daily can manage to avoid being labeled a criminal, so it's not hard to use these things and avoid y
How is this any better? (Score:1)
Instead of runaway cancer, you get runaway obesity? Then you die of a massive coronary.
FAIL
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Just compare the size of a metastasis to the amount of fat that makes you morbidly obese. If you have a tumor the size of an average American's potbelly you're probably terminal already.
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Instead of runaway cancer, you get runaway obesity? Then you die of a massive coronary.
FAIL
Since we don't measure obese people with a 5-year survival scale and stage-rate their decline, I'd say it's rather obvious which one is more dangerous.
And obesity is pretty much 100% curable. I'd much rather take those chances and work on losing the weight than be dead.
Re: (Score:2)
Because it's like asking for a drug that cures viruses. We develop drugs that help deal with specific viruses all the time, but there are a lot of viruses.
Improvements in cancer detection and treatment also seem to be relatively incremental. Something that killed 90% of patients a generation ago maybe kills 50% now, and maybe next year a treatment or diagnostic tool or screening program comes out that brings that down to 45%.
Re:Author recinds GPL (Score:4, Funny)
But it would be better than what we have now!
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Then we'll just get viruses instead. If they don't evolve naturally, someone will make them.
So...I can be cancer-free but (Score:5, Interesting)
Serious question - I understand everyone has fat cells, just that in obese people, they are larger than in lean people. However, if we turn cancer cells into fat cells, and that person adopts a healthy lifestyle to reduce the size of the fat cell, is that a win-win? Or is this a different type of fat cell that has other consequences?
Re:So...I can be cancer-free but (Score:5, Informative)
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Fat itself isn't that bad. People can be very healthy and overweight. However issues on where the fat is forming in excess is where the problems happen. If the Fat is gathering around your organs then your organs are being restricted and will not function properly. Or if you put on too much weight that affects your physical activity then health issues from lack of mobility and getting proper exercise. Also people get fat from an improper diet, so while they are getting fat they are also malnourished.
Peop
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Except after smoking obesity is the second largest cause of cancer in the UK at least.
https://www.cancerresearchuk.o... [cancerresearchuk.org]
For an intro into the science as to why
https://www.cancerresearchuk.o... [cancerresearchuk.org]
The basics are that there is no such thing as being fat and healthy.
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The basics are that there is no such thing as being very fat and healthy.
The
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There are often appearing slim, people who have a lot of health problems because while the fat isn't showing outwardly with a big belly, it is collecting underneath the rib cage squeezing your their internal organs.
[Citation needed]
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The "fit and fat" hypothesis has been disproved.
Fat is not healthy (BMI should be 25)
Heart disease, stroke, diabetes, cancer rates all higher in fat people.
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You just get "skinny" fat cells.
Fat cells can be large or small depending on how much fat they have to store.
I thought woman would want this (Score:2)
Be cancer free with bigger breasts?
Ducks...
And no need to wait for FDA approval (Score:5, Interesting)
Because Basel is a major center for pharma research, with several major firms headquartered there, it nurtures a university/manufacturing complex that makes it the Silicon Valley of the drug trade. Switzerland has its own regulatory apparatus that is notably faster and more responsive than our FDA, with the same high standards. And as a non-EU country, Switzerland is not subject to regulatory luddism from Brussels. If genetic engineering turns out to be part of the next big cancer treatment, it will flourish in Switzerland.
https://www.pharmaceutical-tec... [pharmaceut...nology.com]
Bigger breast ? (Score:1)
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It sounds like it is very timing critical, to catch the cancer cells at the exact right moment.
Also, although it says that EMT is usually associated with embryonic cells, does it mean that there are no normal cells that would be affected ? I'd hate to have my brain suddenly turn to fat like the rest of my body.
Good news (Score:2)
Turn cancer cells into fat cells
Good news for everyone except Hollywood starlets, who'd rather have the cancer.
Intersting work on one tumor (Score:4, Informative)
Fat Cancer (Score:2)
survival of the fattest (Score:2)
no fooling involved (Score:2)
But cancer wants to become fat cells, it just can't remember how without our helpful hints.
This must be my problem! (Score:2)
All my cancer cells turned into fat!
Re: (Score:2)
From my Funk & Wagnalls dictionary, definition 3 of 4 for "into."
To the form, state, or condition of: to change water into steam.
There's nothing wrong there, it's standard vernacular American English, and has been for many years.