science top stories popular news  

Daily non-political popular news in brief.

Cancer stem cells can go it alone

06-11-2007 · EurekAlert!

At the heart of most, if not all cancers, lie a handful of wayward stem cells that feed the ever growing tumor mass, but their scarcity make it difficult for scientists to study them. Now, times of plenty may lie ahead as a breast cancer cell line -- established long ago -- turned out to behave a lot like cancer stem cells.

Read more »

Keywords: cancer, stem, cells, alone, cell

« Previous | Next »

Similar news on "Cancer stem cells can go it alone":

  1. Study questions 'cancer stem cell' hypothesis in breast cancer
    03-12-2007 · EurekAlert!
    A Dana-Farber Cancer Institute study challenges the hypothesis that "cancer stem cells" -- a small number of self-renewing cells within a tumor -- are responsible for breast cancer progression and recurrence, and that wiping out these cells alone could cure the disease.
    Similar news · Read more »
  2. Cancer stem cell subpopulation drives metastasis of human pancreatic cancer
    09-12-2007 · EurekAlert!
    Scientists have identified a distinct subpopulation of cancer stem cells (CSCs) that is responsible for metastasis of a deadly human pancreatic cancer. The research, published by Cell Press in the Sept. issue of the journal Cell Stem Cell, provides insight into the role of CSCs in cancer initiation, progression and metastasis, and suggests new directions for development of more effective therapeutics.
    Similar news · Read more »
  3. There goes the neighborhood: Vascular niche nurtures brain tumor stem cells
    01-16-2007 · EurekAlert!
    New research published in the January 2007 issue of the journal Cancer Cell, published by Cell Press, reveals that small blood vessels associated with brain tumors orchestrate a distinct microenvironment that is critical for maintaining cancer stem cells (CSCs). Importantly, antiangiogenic drugs that disrupt this microenvironment reduce the CSC population and arrest tumor growth.
    Similar news · Read more »
  4. Loss of stem cells correlates with premature aging in animal study
    06-06-2007 · EurekAlert!
    Researchers at the Abramson Family Cancer Research Institute of the University of Pennsylvania have found that deleting a gene important in embryo development leads to premature aging and loss of stem cell reservoirs in adult mice. This gene, ATR, is essential for the body's response to damaged DNA, and mutations in proteins in the DNA damage response underlie certain types of cancer and other disorders in humans.
    Similar news · Read more »
  5. MicroRNA regulates cancer stem cells
    12-13-2007 · EurekAlert!
    Researchers have discovered a key molecular switch that regulates cancer stem cells. This switch, which belongs to a class of molecules called microRNAs, can decrease a cancer stem cell's ability to propagate tumors. These findings offer a way for targeting cancer stem cells directly, and as a result open up new avenues for potentially treating cancer as a whole.
    Similar news · Read more »
  6. Cancer stem cell marker also drives transcription in normal cells
    01-17-2008 · EurekAlert!
    New research links the recently discovered function of a multi-faceted transcriptional complex to control of gene expression in both normal cells and cancer stem cells...
    Similar news · Read more »
  7. USC study in Nature Genetics supports a stem cell origin of cancer
    01-08-2007 · EurekAlert!
    Researchers at the University of Southern California found genes that are reversibly repressed in embryonic stem cells are over-represented among genes that are permanently silenced in cancers.
    Similar news · Read more »
  8. Researchers first to map gene that regulates adult stem cell growth
    01-14-2007 · EurekAlert!
    A new discovery in stem cell research may mean big things for cancer patients in the future. After being the first to genetically map and identify a gene that regulates adult stem cells, the researchers investigated the gene's protein product, Latexin, which can be used to ramp up the body's stem cell count. The team's findings are being published in Nature Genetics.
    Similar news · Read more »
  9. Jefferson scientists uncover role of cancer stem cell marker: controlling gene expression
    01-17-2008 · EurekAlert!
    Scientists at Jefferson's Kimmel Cancer Center in Philadelphia have made an extraordinary advance in the understanding of the function of a gene previously shown to be part of an 11-gene "signature" that can predict which tumors will be aggressive and likely to spread. The gene, USP22, encodes an enzyme that appears to be crucial for controlling large scale changes in gene expression, one of the hallmarks of cancer cells.
    Similar news · Read more »
  10. Stem cell marker identified in head and neck cancer
    01-16-2007 · EurekAlert!
    Researchers have found a marker on head and neck tumor cells that indicates which cells are capable of fueling the cancer's growth. The finding is the first evidence of cancer stem cells in head and neck tumors.
    Similar news · Read more »