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The Engineer
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Progress In Fight Against Cancer

08/29/2006 10:40 AM

When normal cells reach the end of their useful life, internal mechanisms kick in resulting in the death of the cell. In cancer cells, this process is stopped by genetic damage. Researchers have now found a way to reactivate this cell death mechanism (apoptosis) in cancer cells.

In preparation for apoptosis, a chain of chemical events takes place in the cell. Near the end, the chemical procaspase-3 is activated. This chemical then transforms into caspase-3--an executioner enzyme that terminates the cell. Chemist Paul Hergenrother of the University of Illinois and an international team of colleagues realized that a compound that activated procaspase-3 might be effective in killing cancer, because many tumors show elevated levels of procaspase despite their inability to complete apoptosis. After screening 20,500 related molecules for this activation ability, the researchers narrowed it down to four likely candidates. Of these, only one showed an increasingly strong effect with increased doses: newly named procaspase activating compound, or PAC-1.

The researchers tested the efficacy of PAC-1 on colon cancer cells (pictured above) from 23 patients. The tumors had elevated levels of procaspase-3 averaging roughly eight times as much as normal colon cells and proved more sensitive to the compound. In one case, the cancerous cells were 2,000 times more sensitive to PAC-1's enforced apoptosis than were surrounding regular cells due to their increased expression of the enzyme. Further tests in mice proved effective in treating grafted human kidney- and lung-cancer cells, and those results also indicated that PAC-1's strength correlated with procaspase-3 levels in the various cancer cells. "The potential effectiveness of compounds such as PAC-1 could be predicted in advance and patients could be selected for treatment based on the amount of procaspase-3 found in their tumor cells," Hergenrother adds.

Here is the link.

http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?chanID=sa003&arti cleID=00050D07-6D22-14EF-AD2283414B7F0000

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Guru

Join Date: Jul 2006
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#1

Bravo!

08/30/2006 5:06 PM

Well done, Thank you for all your worthwhile efforts, We wish, hope and pray, every success to these endeavours.

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Guru
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#2

Cancer Cell Suicide

08/30/2006 10:51 PM

It sure made a good story and is a valuable part of cancer research. It was worth sharing this information. I was wondering, how fast we come to know about cell death? What is the first symptom one observes?

Shyam

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