International Affairs News Agency
  • Home
  • Breaking News
  • Current Affairs
  • Politics
  • US
  • World
  • Business
  • Crypto News
  • Finance News
  • Agriculture
  • Health
  • Opinion
  • Tech
  • Space
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Viral Videos Of Sushi Conveyor Belt Pranks In Japan Spark Outrage

February 3, 2023

Adani losses top $100 billion in the wake of Hindenburg Research report

February 3, 2023

Google, Apple Disappoint As Tech Earnings Hit, Amazon Beats Expectations

February 3, 2023
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Adani losses top $100 billion in the wake of Hindenburg Research report
  • Charlie Munger says the U.S. should follow in China’s footsteps and ban cryptocurrencies
  • ‘Dodged bullet’: How ‘Fast Money’ traders are responding to Thursday’s Big Tech earnings
  • As stocks surge, some chart signals have been looking better despite lingering risks
  • Debt ceiling deal no closer as McCarthy, Biden vow to continue talks
  • Pro Picks: Watch all of Thursday’s big stock calls on CNBC
  • Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Meta, Align Technology, Coinbase, Eli Lilly and more
  • Annuity sales hit record last year, eclipsing sales during 2008 financial crisis amid fear, higher rates
  • Supreme Court challenges to Biden student loan plan hinge on overreach, financial harm
  • Sen. Kyrsten Sinema pulls in cash from Wall Street, real estate titans as she mulls reelection bid
  • New Zealand likely to remain in recession into next year – Infometrics forecast
  • Roughly 70% of taxpayers are eligible for IRS Free File, but only 2% used it in 2022
  • These are Bank of America’s favorite ETFs to play another energy rally
  • Bank of England hikes rates by 50 basis points, now sees ‘much shallower’ recession than feared
  • Nancy Pelosi endorses Adam Schiff for Senate seat from California if Sen. Dianne Feinstein doesn’t run
  • Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Meta, Align Technology, FedEx, Honeywell and more
  • 5 things to know before the stock market opens Thursday
  • More than 13,000 Nigerian residents take Shell to court over oil spills
  • Ukraine war live updates: Race to find survivors after deadly Kramatorsk attack; Russia preparing for offensive in Donbas
  • Deutsche Bank smashes profit expectations in fourth quarter as higher interest rates bolster revenue
Facebook Twitter YouTube
Friday, February 3
International Affairs News AgencyInternational Affairs News Agency
Hire Experts
  • Home
  • Breaking News
  • Current Affairs

    “We’re for Peter Obi,” Southern, Middle Belt leaders support for LP candidate

    February 2, 2023

    Here’s The Outlook On Those Insane Egg Prices In 2023

    February 2, 2023

    Six Innovations Share Pioneering Solutions to Tackle the Global Food Crisis

    February 2, 2023

    Tension grips Sibuyan amid mining protest

    February 2, 2023

    Post-Global War on Terror, different missions for the National Guard

    February 2, 2023
  • Politics

    Debt ceiling deal no closer as McCarthy, Biden vow to continue talks

    February 2, 2023

    Blinken under pressure to push China on role in lethal fentanyl trade when he visits Beijing | CNN Politics

    February 2, 2023

    Sen. Kyrsten Sinema pulls in cash from Wall Street, real estate titans as she mulls reelection bid

    February 2, 2023

    Maeve Reston joins The Post as national political reporter

    February 2, 2023

    Biden’s top economic adviser Brian Deese to depart White House

    February 2, 2023
  • US
  • World

    Viral Videos Of Sushi Conveyor Belt Pranks In Japan Spark Outrage

    February 3, 2023

    Google, Apple Disappoint As Tech Earnings Hit, Amazon Beats Expectations

    February 3, 2023

    Children Hit By Train In Germany, 1 Killed: Officials

    February 3, 2023

    Putin Compares Russia’s Invasion Of Ukraine To War Against Nazi Germany

    February 3, 2023

    Russia’s Putin Warns West Over Arms Deliveries To Ukraine

    February 2, 2023
  • Business
  • Crypto News

    Sastanaqqam Collaborates with Boosty Labs and Reverb to Create Revolutionary Blockchain-based Ecosystem

    February 2, 2023

    Ethereum Looks Better Than Bitcoin Here (ETH-USD)

    February 2, 2023

    Crypto Winter Led to 91% Plunge in VC and Other Investments for January

    February 2, 2023

    Porsche NFT trading volume nears $5M: Nifty Newsletter, Jan 25–31

    February 2, 2023

    Kraken Retreats: Crypto Exchange Shuts Abu Dhabi Office, Cuts Workforce – Coinbase Global (NASDAQ:COIN)

    February 2, 2023
  • Finance News
  • Agriculture
  • Health
  • Opinion

    E3 2023 Start and End Dates, Publishers, and Schedule Predictions

    February 2, 2023

    Crypto Scams Involving Tether, USD Coin on the Rise | Federal Bureau of Investigation

    February 2, 2023

    Opinion | The disaster in Jenin was sadly predictable. Where do we go from here?

    February 2, 2023

    Saint Omer review – witchcraft and baby killing in extraordinary real-life courtroom drama

    February 2, 2023

    Neil Hare: Winning GOP strategy in 2024 — back to business with immigration reform

    February 2, 2023
  • Tech

    Baker McKenzie’s Machine Learning Leader Discusses the Firm’s Plans for Generative AI | Legaltech News

    February 2, 2023

    Artificial Intelligence and Virtual Health

    February 2, 2023

    What kind of intelligence is artificial intelligence?

    February 2, 2023

    Paging Dr. AI? What ChatGPT and artificial intelligence could mean for the future of medicine | CNN

    February 2, 2023

    MediaX Agency Named Best PR & Media Agency for Web3 and Metaverse

    February 2, 2023
  • Space
Facebook Twitter YouTube
Hire Experts
International Affairs News Agency
Home » Current Affairs » Cancer cells shrink or super-size to survive
Cancer cells shrink or super-size to survive

Cancer cells shrink or super-size to survive

By International AffairsJanuary 25, 2023No Comments5 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Cancer cells shrink or super-size to survive

Image: A small round melanoma cell at the top and a large, flat melanoma cell underneath it. Credit: Professor Chris Bakal, the ICR.

Cancer cells can shrink or super-size themselves to survive drug treatment or other challenges within their environment, researchers have discovered.

Scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, combined biochemical profiling technologies with mathematical analyses to reveal how genetic changes lead to differences in the size of cancer cells – and how these changes could be exploited by new treatments.

The researchers believe smaller cells could be more vulnerable to DNA-damaging agents like chemotherapy combined with targeted drugs, while larger cancer cells might respond better to immunotherapy.

The study, published in the journal Science Advances, was funded by The Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) itself in its role as a charity.

Studying size control in skin cancer

It combined innovative high-powered image analysis with examination of DNA and proteins to study size control in millions of skin cancer cells.

The skin cancer melanoma is driven by two different genetic mutations – 60 per cent of cases are caused by a BRAF gene mutation, while 20 to 30 per cent of cases are caused by an NRAS mutation.

The researchers set out to investigate the differences in size and shape of skin cancer cells harbouring the two mutations, by using mathematical algorithms to analyse huge amounts of data on DNA and proteins.

BRAF and NRAS mutations

The major difference was cell size. BRAF-mutant cancer cells were very small whereas NRAS-mutant cancer cells were much bigger. Drug resistant NRAS cells were even bigger.

Smaller cells appear to be able to tolerate higher levels of DNA damage, as they are very concentrated with proteins that repair DNA – like PARP, BRCA1, or ATM1 proteins.

The ICR researchers believe that this could make them more vulnerable to drugs like PARP inhibitors – drugs blocking proteins responsible for repairing DNA damage – especially when combined with DNA-damaging agents such as chemotherapy.

In contrast, the larger NRAS-mutant cancer cells contained damage to their DNA instead of repairing it, accumulating mutations and enlarging. These larger cells were not as reliant on DNA repair machinery, so using chemotherapy and PARP inhibitors against them might not be as effective.

Larger cells could be more responsive to immunotherapy

Scientists believe larger cells could be more responsive to immunotherapy – because their larger number of mutations could make them look more alien to the body. They are already exploring this theory with further studies.

The researchers believe BRAF and NRAS mutations may be driving the differences in cell size by regulating levels of a protein known as CCND1 – which is involved in cell division, growth and maintaining the cytoskeleton – and its interactions with other proteins.

Findings could also apply to other cancers

While the study focused on skin cancer cells, researchers suspect that this size-shifting ability and its impact on treatment response is common to multiple cancer types. They have already identified similar mechanisms in breast cancer and are now investigating whether the findings could apply to head and neck cancers.

The discovery provides new insight into how the size of cancer cells affects the overall disease, allowing for better predictions of how people with cancer will respond to different treatments simply by analysing cell size.

Existing drugs could even be used to force cancer cells into a desired size prior to treatments like immunotherapy or radiotherapy, which could improve their effectiveness.

‘Cancer cells can shrink or grow’

Study leader Professor Chris Bakal, Professor of Cancer Morphodynamics at The Institute of Cancer Research, London, said:

“We think of cancer as out of control and unpredictable, but we used image analysis and proteomics to show for the first time that certain genetic and protein changes lead to a controlled change in the size of cancer cells. Cancer cells can shrink or grow to enhance their ability to repair or contain DNA damage, and that in turn can make them resistant to certain treatments.

“We think our research has real diagnostic potential. By looking at cell size, pathologists could predict whether a drug will work, or if the cells will be resistant. In the future, it might even be possible to use AI to help guide the pathologist, by making a rapid assessment about the size of cells and so the treatments that are most likely to work.

“We also hope our discovery will lead to new treatment strategies – for example creating drugs to target the proteins that regulate cell size.”

An intriguing, fundamental study

Professor Kristian Helin, Chief Executive of The Institute of Cancer Research, London, said:

“This intriguing, fundamental study provides a correlation between genetic alterations in skin cancer cells and cell size. It opens the potential of using genetic alterations and cell size as biomarkers for how skin cancer will respond to treatments. It’s particularly exciting that cell size could also be an important biomarker for how other cancers, such as breast or head and neck cancers, respond to treatments.”



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Reddit Telegram WhatsApp
International Affairs
  • Website
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

International Affairs News is an independent and non-partisan digital news platform dedicated to providing coverage and analysis of global affairs from a truly international perspective.

Related Posts

Current Affairs

“We’re for Peter Obi,” Southern, Middle Belt leaders support for LP candidate

February 2, 2023
Current Affairs

Here’s The Outlook On Those Insane Egg Prices In 2023

February 2, 2023
Current Affairs

Six Innovations Share Pioneering Solutions to Tackle the Global Food Crisis

February 2, 2023

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Current Affairs

“We’re for Peter Obi,” Southern, Middle Belt leaders support for LP candidate

February 2, 20232 Mins Read

Some elder statesmen and prominent leaders from four of the country’s six geopolitical zones have…

Here’s The Outlook On Those Insane Egg Prices In 2023

February 2, 2023

Six Innovations Share Pioneering Solutions to Tackle the Global Food Crisis

February 2, 2023

Tension grips Sibuyan amid mining protest

February 2, 2023
Top News

Viral Videos Of Sushi Conveyor Belt Pranks In Japan Spark Outrage

February 3, 2023

Adani losses top $100 billion in the wake of Hindenburg Research report

February 3, 2023

Google, Apple Disappoint As Tech Earnings Hit, Amazon Beats Expectations

February 3, 2023

Charlie Munger says the U.S. should follow in China’s footsteps and ban cryptocurrencies

February 3, 2023
The Only Book You Need When Help is Not On The Way
About Us

The International Affairs news channel is a digital platform for independent and non-partisan coverage and analysis of global affairs. International Affairs Daily strives to be a comprehensive source for students, academics, and any professionals looking for global news on the go. Our team consists of individuals from around the world who are passionate about their local issues and global affairs.

Facebook Twitter YouTube

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Latest News

Viral Videos Of Sushi Conveyor Belt Pranks In Japan Spark Outrage

February 3, 2023

Adani losses top $100 billion in the wake of Hindenburg Research report

February 3, 2023

Google, Apple Disappoint As Tech Earnings Hit, Amazon Beats Expectations

February 3, 2023

Charlie Munger says the U.S. should follow in China’s footsteps and ban cryptocurrencies

February 3, 2023
1 2 3 … 12,218 Next
©2023 Designed by International Affairs.
  • Home
  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Privacy Policy
  • About us
  • Affiliate Disclosure

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.