Showing posts with label Cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cancer. Show all posts

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Common colon cancer tumor type blocked in mice: Clinical trial August 2016


A new scientific study has identified why colorectal cancer cells depend on a specific nutrient, and a way to starve them of it. Over one million men and women are living with colorectal cancer in the United States. The National Cancer Institute estimates 4.5% of all men and women will be diagnosed with the cancer during their lifetime, making it the third most common non-skin cancer.
In the study published online in Nature Communications, researchers showed how certain colorectal cancer cells reprogram their metabolism using glutamine, a non-essential amino acid. Many cancer cells rely on glutamine to survive. How they become so dependent on the molecule is hotly debated in the field.
Researchers studied a subset of colorectal cancer cells containing a genetic mutation called PIK3CA. This mutation is located in a gene critical for cell division and movement, and is found in approximately one third of all colorectal cancers. The mutation is also the most commonly identified genetic mutation across all cancers, making the results of the study universally appealing.
Researchers were interested in determining whether or not the common PIK3CA mutation contributes to changes in cancer cell metabolism, such as how nutrients like glutamine are processed. Normally, glutamine is broken down by cancer cells into several other molecules with the help of specific enzymes. This complicated system helps produce adenosine triphosphate, the energy currency of all cells, and other molecules critical for colorectal cancer cell growth.
The researchers found that colorectal cells with the PIK3CA mutation broke down significantly more glutamine than cells without the mutation. The researchers identified several enzymes involved in the process that are more active in the mutant cancer cells than in other cell types, explaining the increased need for glutamine. These enzymes become overactive in the mutant cancer cells due to a cascade of signals led by the protein encoded by mutant PIK3CA gene. This finding represents a novel and important link between the common PIK3CA mutation and altered glutamine metabolism in cancer cells.
Zhenghe John Wang, PhD, professor of genetics and genome sciences and co-leader of the Cancer Genetics Program at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine helped lead the study. "In layman's terms, we discovered that colon cancers with PIK3CA oncogenic mutations are addicted to glutamine, a particular nutrient for cancer cells. We also demonstrated that these cancers can be starved to death by depriving glutamine with drugs."
When the researchers lowered the amount of glutamine available to mutant cancer cells growing in laboratory dishes, the cancer cells died. This discovery led the team to investigate the effects of blocking glutamine availability in mice with colorectal cancer tumors containing the common PIK3CA mutation. Wang and colleagues found that exposing these mice to a compound that blocks glutamine metabolism consistently suppressed tumor growth. They did not observe the same effect on tumors without the mutation. Together, these results provide a promising new therapeutic avenue to suppress growth of colorectal tumors with the PIK3CA mutation. The researchers have filed a patent application based on the unique mechanism of tumor suppression they have identified and the work is available for licensing.
"This study provides the basis for a colon cancer treatment clinical trial that will be started in the summer at the University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center," according to Neal Meropol, MD, Dr. Lester E. Coleman, Jr. Professor of Cancer Research and Therapeutics, chief of the division of hematology and oncology, and principal investigator for the trial. The phase I/II study will test the effects of a glutamine metabolism inhibitor in patients with advanced colorectal tumors.

Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from materials provided by Case Western Reserve UniversityNote: Materials may be edited for content and length.

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Les hommes plus touchés que les femmes par les cancers liés au sexe oral


La réponse du système immunitaire serait plus faible chez les hommes, les rendant plus vulnérables à une infection par un papillomavirus.

Les hommes sont deux fois plus touchés que les femmes par le cancer de la gorge et de la bouche lié à une infection par un papillomavirus (HPV) qui résulte de la fréquence de rapports sexuels bucco-génitaux, selon une étude américaine présentée vendredi.
Près de deux cancers oropharyngés sur trois sont provoqués aux Etats-Unis et dans la plupart des pays occidentaux par une infection par le HPV 16 et leur fréquence a nettement augmenté ces dernières années, a expliqué Gypsyamber D'Souza, professeur adjointe d'épidémiologie à l'Université Johns Hopkins à Baltimore (Maryland), qui présentait ses travaux à la conférence annuelle de l'American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) réunie ce week-end à Washington.

Une réponse immunitaire différente

La pratique de la fellation ou du cunnilingus entraîne ces cancers qui touchent beaucoup plus les hommes, surtout blancs d'âge moyen, que les femmes. L'analyse montre que ces pratiques répandues commencent à un plus jeune âge et que la fréquence de nouveaux partenaires est également plus grande. "Notre étude montre que chez les hommes le risque d'une infection par le HPV s'accroît avec le nombre de leurs partenaires avec qui ils ont eu des relations sexuelles buccales", a expliqué la chercheuse. En revanche chez les femmes, le nombre de récents partenaires n'a pas semblé augmenter le risque d'infection. Ainsi à nombre égal de partenaires, les hommes ont beaucoup plus de risques d'être infectés par des HPV.
L'étude montre que les femmes qui ont eu plus de partenaires pour des relations vaginales avaient moins de risque d'infection par le HPV transmis par ces pratiques. Cela suggère qu'une première exposition vaginale au HPV confère une plus grande protection en déclenchant une forte réaction immunitaire, déduit l'auteur de l'étude. Il semblerait que chez les hommes la réponse du système immunitaire soit plus faible ce qui les rend plus vulnérables à une infection.
Cette infection est assez fréquente et la plupart des personnes l'élimine en un ou deux ans mais les hommes moins que les femmes. Le HPV ne déclenche pas directement les mutations responsables de la tumeur mais provoque des changement dans les cellules qu'il infecte dans la gorge ou le col de l'utérus qui deviennent cancéreuses. Le sexe oral augmenterait le risque de cancer oropharyngé de 22%, selon une étude publiée en janvier dans le Journal of the American Medical Association. Ce type de cancer a augmenté de 225% depuis 20 ans.

Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Height influences risk of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cancer


Height is largely genetically determined, but in recent decades the height of children and adults has steadily increased throughout the world: In adulthood the children are almost always significantly taller than their parents. The largest increase in height in recent decades is found in the Netherlands. Dutch men are now 20 cm taller than they were 150 years ago. Interestingly, in the Netherlands the per capita consumption of milk and dairy products is the highest in the world.

Monday, February 1, 2016

Cancer screening has never been shown to 'save lives,' argue experts


Cancer screening has never been shown to "save lives" as advocates claim, argue experts in The BMJ.

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