Cancer breakthrough as tumour cells induced to ‘commit suicide’

Cancer cells may be induced to successfully “commit suicide” by feeding them a recipe to supply a pure micro organism toxin.

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This is the discovering of a staff of researchers from Israel, who've demonstrated the idea in a mouse mannequin of the pores and skin most cancers melanoma.

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They confirmed {that a} single injection was able to killing 44–66 % of skin cancer cells focused.

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The toxin recipe was encoded into messenger RNA molecules that had been then packed in nanoparticles coated in antibodies designed to make sure they solely affected the most cancers cells.

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In this manner, the therapy strategy — if proven to additionally work in people — may overcome one of many foremost limitations of chemotherapy, which isn't selective and causes negative effects.

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The research was undertaken by biochemist Professor Dan Peer of Israel’s Tel Aviv University and his colleagues.

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Prof. Peer defined: “Many bacteria secrete toxins. The most famous of these is probably the botulinum toxins injected in Botox treatments.

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“Another classic treatment technique is chemotherapy, involving the delivery of small molecules through the bloodstream to effectively kill cancer cells.

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“However, chemotherapy has a major downside — it is not selective, and also kills healthy cells.”

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Prof. Peer continued: “Our concept was to ship protected mRNA molecules encoded for a bacterial toxin on to the most cancers cells."

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This approach, he explained, works by “inducing these cells to actually produce the toxic protein that would later kill them. It's like placing a Trojan horse inside the cancer cell”.

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In their experiments, the team encoded the genetic information needed to manufacture the toxin produced by the pseudomonas genus of bacteria into messenger RNA (mRNA).

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(Pseudomonas includes 313 species of gram-negative bacteria that have a great deal of metabolic diversity and are thus found in various settings — with some living in soil, others in plants, and others still even able to infect humans.)

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The mRNA molecules were wrapped up in lipid nanoparticles that were then coated in antibodies designed to be selective to melanoma cancer cells.

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Prof. Peer said: “We used pseudomonas bacteria and the melanoma cancer, but this was only a matter of convenience.

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“Many anaerobic bacteria — especially those that live in the ground — secrete toxins, and most of these toxins can probably be used with our method.

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“This is our ‘recipe’, and we know how to deliver it directly to the target cells with our nanoparticles.”

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Prof. Peer continued: “When the cancer cell reads the ‘recipe’ at the other end, it starts to produce the toxin as if it were the bacteria itself, and this self-produced toxin eventually kills it.

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“Thus, with a simple injection to the tumour bed, we can cause cancer cells to ‘commit suicide‘, without damaging healthy cells.”

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He concluded: “Moreover, cancer cells cannot develop resistance to our technology, as often happens with chemotherapy — because we can always use a different natural toxin.”

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The full findings of the study were published in the journal Theranostics.

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