Treating cancer as a chronic disease?
ScienceDaily (Mar. 29, 2012) — New research
from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology Rappaport Faculty of
Medicine and Research Institute and the Rambam Medical Center may lead
to the development of new methods for controlling the growth of cancer,
and perhaps lead to treatments that will transform cancer from a lethal
disease to a chronic, manageable one, similar to AIDS.............
".......For this study, the team took cells from one woman's ovarian clear
cell carcinoma and injected them either into or alongside the human stem
cell-derived environment. "We noticed very early on, rather strikingly,
that the human cancer cells grow more robustly when they are in the
teratoma environment compared to any other means in which we grew them,
such as in a mouse muscle or under the skin of a mouse," says Skorecki.
The scientists were able to tease out six different kinds of
self-renewing cells, based on behavior -- how quickly they grow, how
aggressive they are, how they differentiate -- and on their molecular
profile. This was a previously unknown finding, that one tumor might
have such a diversity of cells with crucial fundamental growth
properties. Tzukerman explains that the growth of the cancer cell
subpopulations can now be explained by their proximity to the human cell
environment.
The researchers cloned and expanded the six distinct cell populations
and injected them into the human stem cell teratomas. One key
observation is that some cells, which were not self-replicating in any
other model, became self-replicating when exposed to the human cells.
Skorecki said that while he wasn't surprised that the human
environment affected the growth, he was in fact surprised by the
magnitude of the effect: "We've known for years now that cancers are
complex organs, but I didn't think the power of the human stem cell
environment would be so robust, that it would make such a big difference
in how the cells were grown."........
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