Major Cancer Research Breakthrough

Thorn

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This is huge.

Scientists unlock genetic code in major cancer breakthrough
By Phil Han, CNN
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Scientists have mapped the genetic codes of lung and skin cancer
The study will help in the treatment and discovery of deadly tumors
10 other countries are involved in similar studies around the world
Cancer claims more than seven million lives each year worldwide
RELATED TOPICS
Cancer
Gene Therapy
Medicine
London, England (CNN) -- The entire genetic codes of two common types of cancer have been cracked, according to scientists, who say the breakthrough could unlock a new era in the treatment of deadly diseases.

Scientists at the UK-based Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute catalogued the genetic maps of skin and lung cancer and have pinpointed the specific mutations within DNA that can lead to dangerous tumors.

Researchers predict these maps will offer patients a personalized treatment option that ranges from earlier detection to the types of medication used to treat cancer.

The genetic maps will also allow cancer researchers to study cells with defective DNA and produce more powerful drugs to fight the errors, according to the the study's scientists.

"The knowledge we extract over the next few years will have major implications for treatment," Peter Campbell from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute said.

"By identifying all the cancer genes we will be able to develop new drugs that target the specific mutated genes and work out which patients will benefit from these novel treatments."

Scientists found that the DNA code for skin cancer contained nearly 30,000 errors and lung cancer DNA contained more than 23,000.

"These are the two main cancers in the developed world for which we know the primary exposure," Mike Stratton, from the Cancer Genome Project said.

"For lung cancer, it is cigarette smoke and for malignant melanoma it is exposure to sunlight.

"With these genome sequences, we have been able to explore deep into the past of each tumor, uncovering with remarkable clarity the imprints of these environmental mutagens on DNA, which occurred years before the tumor became apparent."

The study suggests that an error occurs for every 15 cigarettes that are smoked.

Scientists as part of the International Cancer Genome Consortium in other countries around the world are completing similar studies -- the UK is looking at breast cancer, the U.S. at brain, ovary and pancreatic cancer, and Japan at the liver.

Cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide and claims more than seven million lives each year according to the World Health Organization.[/SIZE]
 
I saw this and was fascinated. The number of error messages in the DNA code is phenomenal.
 
I saw this and was fascinated. The number of error messages in the DNA code is phenomenal.

Most of those "errors" tend to be benign, and they are what lead to genetic drift, or, in a nutshell, why we differ from our parents and siblings.
The few that are not benign, though, can be devastating. Some expressions, like cancer, may require a catalyst (external carcinogens, stress, e.g.); others occur spontaneously.
 
This is huge.

Scientists unlock genetic code in major cancer breakthrough
By Phil Han, CNN
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Scientists have mapped the genetic codes of lung and skin cancer
The study will help in the treatment and discovery of deadly tumors
10 other countries are involved in similar studies around the world
Cancer claims more than seven million lives each year worldwide
RELATED TOPICS
Cancer
Gene Therapy
Medicine
London, England (CNN) -- The entire genetic codes of two common types of cancer have been cracked, according to scientists, who say the breakthrough could unlock a new era in the treatment of deadly diseases.

Scientists at the UK-based Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute catalogued the genetic maps of skin and lung cancer and have pinpointed the specific mutations within DNA that can lead to dangerous tumors.

Researchers predict these maps will offer patients a personalized treatment option that ranges from earlier detection to the types of medication used to treat cancer.

The genetic maps will also allow cancer researchers to study cells with defective DNA and produce more powerful drugs to fight the errors, according to the the study's scientists.

"The knowledge we extract over the next few years will have major implications for treatment," Peter Campbell from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute said.

"By identifying all the cancer genes we will be able to develop new drugs that target the specific mutated genes and work out which patients will benefit from these novel treatments."

Scientists found that the DNA code for skin cancer contained nearly 30,000 errors and lung cancer DNA contained more than 23,000.

"These are the two main cancers in the developed world for which we know the primary exposure," Mike Stratton, from the Cancer Genome Project said.

"For lung cancer, it is cigarette smoke and for malignant melanoma it is exposure to sunlight.

"With these genome sequences, we have been able to explore deep into the past of each tumor, uncovering with remarkable clarity the imprints of these environmental mutagens on DNA, which occurred years before the tumor became apparent."

The study suggests that an error occurs for every 15 cigarettes that are smoked.

Scientists as part of the International Cancer Genome Consortium in other countries around the world are completing similar studies -- the UK is looking at breast cancer, the U.S. at brain, ovary and pancreatic cancer, and Japan at the liver.

Cancer is a leading cause of death worldwide and claims more than seven million lives each year according to the World Health Organization.[/SIZE]

that is great... I am invested in a private placement with a firm that looks to have found a way to better detect cancer cells. Combined with the above's apparent ability to potentially target each type specifically (eventually anyway), cancer could finally be seeing its days as a death dealer ending.
 
Most of those "errors" tend to be benign, and they are what lead to genetic drift, or, in a nutshell, why we differ from our parents and siblings.
The few that are not benign, though, can be devastating. Some expressions, like cancer, may require a catalyst (external carcinogens, stress, e.g.); others occur spontaneously.
So now that these expressions/errors have been discovered can they be turned on/off like the lock and key model for antibody/antigens?
 
So now that these expressions/errors have been discovered can they be turned on/off like the lock and key model for antibody/antigens?

It looks like they're working on that, for the cancer abnormalities. As you know, though, "cancer" has so many different forms that breakthroughs in one area won't necessarily translate to others. One friend of mine is alive and well more than seven years after suffering small cell carcinoma that settled in her lung. Another had a renal cancer that was entirely refractory to any chemo or other treatment and died not long after being diagnosed. She also developed an entirely different form of cancer in a lung at that same time.
 
I read this was comming several years ago... Glad its happening. I was hoping it would be in time to help my father, but sadly its a few years too late.

We are missing him this Holiday Season.... Although he never really enjoyed X-Mas much anyway...
 
I was reading some interesting stuff yesterday about how they are developing computers that will "learn" about a person. Starting with basics about how the persons decision making process works, but ultimatly being able to scan a persons brain, then the "computer" will be some form of a faxsimile of the persons personality.

You will have a "computer" that will mimic your ancestors, or your son who is away at college.

Imagine that 200 years ago most people had no idea what there deceased grandparents looked like, but we invented photographs and now many of us have an image of them, I have immages going way back from paintings. Anyway, soon, not only will we have immages of there looks, but immages of there personalities.

That seems sooo cool to me!
 
I was reading some interesting stuff yesterday about how they are developing computers that will "learn" about a person. Starting with basics about how the persons decision making process works, but ultimatly being able to scan a persons brain, then the "computer" will be some form of a faxsimile of the persons personality.

You will have a "computer" that will mimic your ancestors, or your son who is away at college.

Imagine that 200 years ago most people had no idea what there deceased grandparents looked like, but we invented photographs and now many of us have an image of them, I have immages going way back from paintings. Anyway, soon, not only will we have immages of there looks, but immages of there personalities.

That seems sooo cool to me!


I don't know ... that seems horrifically invasive to me! So far as any computer being able to scan an individual's brain and determine personality, that's pie-in-the-sky science fiction at this time, and I expect it always will be. Personality is unimaginably complex, for a starter, and any sort of profile will be limited by the input to the program, the interpretations of the scanners, who may or may not understand or remain true to the original research (the accuracy of which will always be in question), and a whole host of other factors.
It makes me nervous because I'm all too familiar with the rifts between psychological research and true, biological, physiological, neurochemical, neuroscience research. I even did one of my comprehensive exams on one aspect of that as a grad student.

Let's hope that something like this never gains enough funding to attempt to attain any credibility.
 
I was reading some interesting stuff yesterday about how they are developing computers that will "learn" about a person. Starting with basics about how the persons decision making process works, but ultimatly being able to scan a persons brain, then the "computer" will be some form of a faxsimile of the persons personality.

You will have a "computer" that will mimic your ancestors, or your son who is away at college.

Imagine that 200 years ago most people had no idea what there deceased grandparents looked like, but we invented photographs and now many of us have an image of them, I have immages going way back from paintings. Anyway, soon, not only will we have immages of there looks, but immages of there personalities.

That seems sooo cool to me!
I don't want the computer to mimic my daughter.
 
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