The CNIO researchers show that cell defects caused by the inhibition of Cdh1 are independent of the presence of the p53 molecule, which is mutated in
different types of tumours.
The team used five types of antibiotics — including one used to treat acne (doxycycline)-- on cell lines of eight
different types of tumour and found that four of them eradicated the cancer stem cells in every test.
Not exact matches
Molecular characterization
of the cells that undergo cell fate transition upon oncogenic Pik3ca expression demonstrated a profound oncogene - induced reprogramming
of these newly formed cells and identified gene expression signatures, characteristic
of the
different cell fate switches, which was predictive
of the cancer cell
of origin,
tumour type and clinical outcomes in women with breast cancers.
The researchers found five
different sub-
types of HL among the patients studied: 247 cases
of the nodular sclerosis (NS)
type, in which the
tumour nodules are large; 105
of mixed cellularity, where a mixture
of different types of inflammatory cells are involved; 58 lymphocyte rich, the sub-
type with the best outcome; 68 «others»; and 143 «not otherwise specified» (NOS).
The use
of whole genome sequencing enables researchers to accurately distinguish between
tumour types with
different treatment strategies.
While it is present on a number
of different types of cells in the body, it is expressed at higher levels on metastatic
tumour cells, including those which have spread from the lung.
Although most
of the work has been carried out using in vivo studies, Asst Prof Gasser has been collaborating with Dr Joanne Ngeow at the National Cancer Centre Singapore to characterise the process in
different types of human
tumours.
They analysed about a million
different cell mutations in more than 7,000
tumours from the Cancer Genome Atlas covering 24
types of cancer.
We see extensive variability in genomes among
tumours of different tissue
types, among
different patients within a tissue
type and among subclones within a given patient's cancer.
Professor John Griffiths, co-lead researcher based at the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute, said: «The revelation that
different types of brain
tumours appear to be using similar tricks to survive was startling.
TCGA has generated vast amounts
of data through the analysis
of primary
tumours from 33
different types of cancer, collecting 7
different data
types.
The program works by looking for specific molecular patterns in cancer DNA that is free flowing in the patients» blood and comparing the patterns against a database
of tumour epigenetics, from
different cancer
types, collated by the authors.
The results suggest that brain
tumours adapt their chemical reactions in very similar ways to survive in the brain, despite starting in very
different types of cells and regions.
Different types of brain
tumours may use strikingly similar approaches to generate and use energy to survive in the brain, according to a new study * published in PLOS ONE.
While there are many
different types of cancer, all
of them stem from the abnormal growth
of cells that invade numerous body sites, quickly leading to the formation
of tumours that are either benign (restricted to a local area and removable) or malignant (invasive, spreading throughout the body).