Researchers find family of 'on switches' that cause cancer

Try to keep the topics in here with headings that relate to SCIENCE.

Moderators: Pongo, stackoverflow, S.A. BOINC, Warped

Researchers find family of 'on switches' that cause cancer

Postby S.A. BOINC on Sun Feb 03, 2008 7:10 am

Researchers find family of 'on switches' that cause prostate cancer

Researchers at the University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center have discovered how genes turn on the switch that leads to prostate cancer.


The team discovered that pieces of two chromosomes can trade places with each other and cause two genes to fuse together. The fused genes then override the “off” switch that keeps cells from growing uncontrollably, causing prostate cancer to develop.

By testing these gene fusions in mice and in cell cultures, the researchers showed that the fusions are what cause prostate cancer to develop. But it’s not just one set of genes that fuse. The researchers found that any one of several in a family of genes can become scrambled and fuse. Results of the study appear in the Aug. 2 issue of Nature.

“Each of these switches, or gene fusions, represent different molecular subtypes. This tells us there’s not just one type of prostate cancer. It’s a more complex disease and potentially needs to be treated differently in each patient,” says lead study author Arul Chinnaiyan, M.D., Ph.D., director of the Michigan Center for Translational Pathology, a new U-M center whose goal is to translate research into real world practice.

click for full story
Bringing team South Africa together on all BOINC projects.

John
--------
User avatar
S.A. BOINC
Site Admin
 
Posts: 137
Joined: Tue Aug 07, 2007 4:41 am

Return to ANYTHING TO DO WITH SCIENCE

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests

cron