Seen: How a cell becomes cancerous
- Seen: How a cell becomes cancerous
Seen: How a cell becomes cancerous
Gina Kolata | NYT News Service | Jan 30, 2016, 04.05 AM IST
It
was just a tiny speck, a single cell that researchers had marked with a
fluorescent green dye. But it was the very first cell of what would
grow to be a melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer. Never before
had researchers captured a cancer so early.
The cell was not a
cancer yet. But its state was surprising: It was a cell that had
reverted to an embryonic form, when it could have developed into any
cell type. As it began to divide, cancer genes took over and the single
primitive cell barreled forward into a massive tumour.
Those
were the findings of Dr Leonard Zon of Boston Children's Hospital, Dr
Charles K Kaufman, and their colleagues, in a study published on
Thursday in the journal Science that offers new insight into how cancers
may develop.
The researchers
stumbled on that first cell of a melanoma when they set out to solve a
puzzle that has baffled cancer investigators: Why do many cells that
have cancer genes never turn cancerous?
Much more study is needed, but researchers say the result can help
understand why melanomas and possibly other cancers form, and
potentially prevent them.
It may provide a way to stop melanomas from growing back after they have been cut down by drugs.
The prevailing idea about the development of a cancer is that genes
randomly mutate in a healthy cell, perhaps from sun exposure, perhaps
from simple bad luck.
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