Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California

blank

 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: cancer treatment + potential + cancer  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/12/2008)

GTx, Inc. Reports First Quarter 2008 Financial Results
WELT ONLINE, Germany -
The Merck-GTx SARM clinical program is currently pursuing sarcopenia and cancer cachexia, with multiple SARM molecules being evaluated in Phase I and Phase ...GTXI
How to Compete Successfully Against Giants
Motley Fool -
Cancer drugs are very toxic, and practitioners put their own health at risk when they handle and administer the compounds. Additionally, cancer treatment ...PFE - WMT
Specific Gene Mutations May Affect Response to Tamoxifen in Breast ...
Cancer Consultants, ID -
1 Historically, tamoxifen was the most widely used hormone agent for the treatment of hormone-positive breast cancer. Newer agents, however, referred to as ...
Affordable vaccines, screening vital to stop rise of cervical ...
FirstScience, UK -
?Ultimately, this analysis should convince national health authorities in the region that the time has come to make the fight against cervical cancer a ...

NewsOK.com (subscription)
Leukemia patient invents a machine that shows promise in killing ...
NewsOK.com (subscription), OK -
By Heather Warlick If his invention proves successful, John Kanzius may one day be known as a man who found a treatment for cancer, found a way to provide ...
Vitamin D and cancer: maintaining levels key to protection?
NutraIngredients.com, France -
"These data support other studies suggesting that vitamin D supplementation might be promising for the treatment and/or prevention of cancer and are in line ...
Thallion Receives Health Canada Approval to Initiate Phase II for ...
FOXBusiness -
Preclinical data suggest that TLN-4601 is a targeted anti-cancer agent that inhibits the Ras/MAPK pathway and binds the PBR (peripheral benzodiazepine ...TSE:TLN - OTC:CMTX
Veran Medical Technologies Secures $4.75M in First Institutional ...
SunHerald.com, MS -
This is leading to detection of potential cancer much earlier in the disease cycle. Tools are needed to encourage early treatment through safe, ...
Chemo fax helps GP cancer care
6minutes, Australia - May 11, 2008
... intervention that should be widely implemented and has the potential to improve outcomes for patients, as well as for GPs and cancer treatment centres."
BEMA(TM) Fentanyl Phase III Data Demonstrating Efficacy And ...
Medical News Today (press release), UK -
"Breakthrough cancer pain can be devastating to patients with cancer and their families. Patients suffering from breakthrough cancer pain need treatment ...BDSI
Source: Google News

Review article: high intensity focused ultrasound--potential for cancer treatment -
CR Hill, GR ter Haar - British Journal of Radiology, 1995 - Br Inst Radiology
... Institute of Radiology. ARTICLES. Review article: high intensity focused
ultrasound--potential for cancer treatment. CR Hill and GR ...

Therapeutic potential of inhibition of the NF-?B pathway in the treatment of inflammation and cancer -
Y Yamamoto, RB Gaynor - Journal of Clinical Investigation, 2001 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... 2001, American Society for Clinical Investigation. Therapeutic potential of inhibition
of the NF-?B pathway in the treatment of inflammation and cancer. ...

Cancer Treatment by Targeted Drug Delivery to Tumor Vasculature in a Mouse Model -
W Arap, R Pasqualini, E Ruoslahti - Science, 1998 - sciencemag.org
... New targeting strategies, including the ones described here, have the potential
to markedly improve cancer treatment. REFERENCES AND NOTES. ...

… pH gradient in tumor versus normal tissue: potential exploitation for the treatment of cancer -
LE Gerweck - Cancer Research, 1996 - AACR
... Research. ARTICLES. Cellular pH gradient in tumor versus normal tissue: potential
exploitation for the treatment of cancer. LE Gerweck ...

Potential Role of Tamoxifen in Prevention of Breast Cancer -
SG Nayfield, JE Karp, LG Ford, FA Dorr, BS Kramer - jnci, 1991 - jnci.oxfordjournals.org
... advances in early detection and treatment of breast ... therapy for early-stage breast
cancer have demonstrated a 35 ... with controls, suggesting a potential role for ...

… and Sensitive Method for Diagnostic Screening With Potential Implications on Pharmacologic Treatment -
A Marchetti, C Martella, L Felicioni, F Barassi, S … - Journal of Clinical Oncology, 2005 - jcojournal.org
... EGFR Mutations in Non?Small-Cell Lung Cancer: Analysis of ... Method for Diagnostic
Screening With Potential Implications on Pharmacologic Treatment. ...

… -EGF: a fully human anti-epidermal growth factor receptor monoclonal antibody for cancer treatment. -
DH Lynch, XD Yang - Semin Oncol, 2002 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Click here to read Therapeutic potential of ABX-EGF: a fully human anti-epidermal
growth factor receptor monoclonal antibody for cancer treatment. ...

… pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic potential in the treatment of cancer -
CM Spencer, D Faulds - Drugs, 1994 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Drugs. 1994 Nov;48(5):794-847. Paclitaxel. A review of its pharmacodynamic and
pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic potential in the treatment of cancer. ...

Potential for cancer related health services research using a linked Medicare-tumor registry … -
AL Potosky, GF Riley, JD Lubitz, RM Mentnech, LG … - Med Care, 1993 - JSTOR
... 1993, JB Lippincott Company Potential for Cancer Related Health ... interest in cancer
costs, access to cancer prevention and treatment services, and ...

From the Cover: Prospective identification of tumorigenic breast cancer cells -
M Al-Hajj, MS Wicha, A Benito-Hernandez, SJ … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003 - National Acad Sciences
... an incurable disease by current treatment strategies. ... had the appearances of epithelial
cancer cells (Fig. ... diverse cells with reduced proliferative potential. ...

Source: Google Scholar

Potential For Cancer Treatment

An enzyme that cancer cells eliminate, apparently so they can keep proliferating, may hold clues to more targeted, effective cancer treatment, scientists say.

In a high-stakes tit for tat, protein kinase G enables healthy cells to stay on task to proliferate, differentiate then provide a useful function. Cancer somehow reduces or eliminates PKG and cells get stuck proliferating.

"The bottom line is, in normal tissue, you can see PKG being expressed; but tumors or cell lines that correlate with those tissues don't have nearly as much," says Dr. Darren Browning, cancer researcher at the Medical College of Georgia.

Cell lines used for all types of research appear to support his hypothesis. Many are actually cancer cells because of their proclivity to keep producing; Dr. Browning and others have shown PKG is lost in these cells. "You split them once or twice and they kind of lose their character," he says.

The same appears true for tumors in people, says Dr. Browning, whose lab has found dramatic differences in PKG levels in tumors compared to even nearby, healthy tissue removed in surgery to ensure a cancer-free margin.

The findings made him wonder if the change in PKG level was just an artifact or was critical to cancer survival. "A lot of proteins are lost by cancer cells, so we asked, 'What happens if we put PKG back into the cancer cells"'"

He took metastatic colon cancer cells, created a system for reintroducing PKG, then put the cells into mice without an immune system. He admits he was disappointed that the PKG-enhanced cells grew but became very interested in how they grew.

Cancer cells without PKG created hard, solid tumors that spread. PKG-enhanced cells created a soft, non-invasive tumor that literally fell apart on contact and seemed to grow in little islands. After consultation with pathologists and others, he realized the PKG-enhanced cells were congregating around the few blood vessels. "We know that cancer cells, particularly colon cancer cells, are very aggressive at bringing blood vessels into the tumor," he says. Cells poor at recruiting blood vessels don't grow well, which seems to be the case for PKG-enhanced colon cancer cells.

Now he wants to know how PKG nullifies aggressive metastatic cancer cells. "We think PKG inhibits cancer by getting rid of a cancer-promoting gene called beta-catenin, which slows growth and blocks the tumor's ability to recruit blood vessels that are needed to grow bigger," says Dr. Browning, who recently received a $720,000 American Cancer Society grant to pursue his hypothesis. His proposal was ranked number one by the ACS Cell Structure and Metastasis Study Section.

He's already shown that PKG can reduce vascular endothelial growth factor, or VEGF; anti-VEGF drugs are the focus of numerous anti-cancer trials underway in the country because of VEGF's critical role in development of new blood vessels. "Maybe by activating PKG or increasing PKG expression in tumors, we are going to reduce the amount of VEGF they produce," he says. "We don't know whether PKG has a role in going from normal tissue to the initiation of a tumor, but we think it's important to the tumor both in terms of angiogenesis and blocking metastasis." He points to one of his studies in which colon cancer's spread to the lungs -- a common path for metastatic colon cancer -- was completely blocked by PKG expression.

A big part of the magic of PKG may be its impact on a gene called beta-catenin, which enables many stem cells, including those in the skin, bone marrow and colon, to proliferate throughout life. Little pits called crypts in the wall of the colon contain Wnt hormone which stimulate nearby stem cells, causing an increase in beta-catenin. The net effect is the colon makes new cells to replace cells lost to the ongoing grind of absorbing water and minerals from food and forming and eliminating waste.

As cells start moving out of the crypt, away from the Wnt hormone, beta-catenin levels go down so cells should stop dividing and start maturing. Essentially all colon cancers have an aberration in this beta-catenin system that prevents normal degradation and allows cell to keep proliferating.

"In the normal cells that line the colon, you don't see very much beta-catenin. We think PKG in these cells keeps it that way to keep the cells from continuing to proliferate and spread," says Dr. Browning, who has already shown that in the test tube at least, adding PKG lowers beta-catenin levels. Interestingly, beta-catenin also is known to regulate VEGF expression in colon cancer.

"In a nutshell, the first and most important genetic lesions leading to colon cancer cause increased beta-catenin levels," says Dr. Browning. "We found PKG can knock down beta-catenin levels by up to 80 percent in some colon cancer cells and we think that is part of the mechanism by which PKG is able to block tumor angiogenesis and metastasis."

He's excited by the implications and is involved in extensive collaborations to understand how PKG regulates beta-catenin and how it might be used in cancer therapies.

Evidence of PKG's effectiveness in fighting colon cancer in humans may already be available. Colon and rectal cancer is the third most common cancer in men and women in the United States but it's rare in developing countries where residents eat less processed food and ingest more bacteria. Some of these bacteria make a protein, STa, which appears to prevent and even kill colon cancer cells. Dr. Browning believes that PKG is responsible for STa's anti-cancer effects.

Source: Toni Baker
Medical College of Georgia

 
 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com

Search inside Iconocast for the keyword you have in mind.

Iconocast has collected more than 50,000 articles and press releases on health and science.

These are current and most up to date press releases on the subject you are searching.

We collect current health and science press releases daily from more than 5000 research and health institutes. Here is an example : The elderberry way to perfect skin

We believe if you do search inside Iconocast, you will get better results than searching the web alone.

 
 
Continue News With: News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services.

 

Iconocast Home Page

Contact Iconocast

© 2003-07. ICONOCAST is a trademark of iconocast.com.