Guest guest Posted July 17, 2009 Report Share Posted July 17, 2009 Personally, I doubt they'll find a CURE for cancer this way, but interesting . . . Cancer Caused by New Kind of Gene It was a few years ago that Croce began to sniff out one of the most surprising and most promising discoveries in cancer research. The discovery placed him and his collaborators at the leading edge of a now-booming field that promises improved techniques for diagnosing cancer diseases and, they hope, more effective new treatments. Ambros' new gene was truly tiny, only 70 bases long, not 10,000 bases like other genes. Stranger still, the gene didn't make a protein, as other genes do. Instead, it made another kind of genetic material, which is now called microRNA. Traditional genes make RNA also, but that RNA is short-lived, serving as a mere intermediary in the construction of proteins. But this microRNA was the gene's end product, and it was no mere messenger. " Every cancer we look at, we find an alteration in microRNA, " says Croce. " In probably every human tumor there are alterations in microRNA. " Calin and Croce were convinced: these two tiny genes made microRNAs that suppressed cancer. MicroRNA, Ambros and Ruvkun realized, worked by an intriguing mechanism: it acted like a miniature strip of Velcro. Because the microRNA gene matched part of a traditional gene, the microRNA stuck to RNA produced by the traditional gene. In doing so, it blocked the other gene from producing protein. Read more: http://snipr.com/n9xqu Of course, the cures for cancer are already largely known, if only the world were open to them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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