Tomato Genes Produce Promising Results Against Brain Tumours
Filed under: Biology / Biochemistry, Cancer / Oncology, Genetics, Neurology / Neuroscience
Tomato genes could be used as a future treatment in gene therapy, according to new research results from Lund University.
Jure Piskur is a Professor at the Department of Biology, Lund University. Together with colleagues from Stockholm, Copenhagen and Lund, he has recently published research results on a tomato gene that it seems could be of value in future treatment of brain tumours. The results are reported in the journal Neuro-Oncology.
Research on gene therapy has been underway for a long time and last autumn the first gene therapy treatment was launched onto the market, by Ark Therapeutics from Kuopio in Finland.
The idea of gene therapy is to introduce an alien gene into a patient’s cancer cells. In combination with a specific drug, the introduced gene can cause the cancer cells to die. The tumour does not disappear, but the hope is that the disease can be halted for a couple of years. Read more
Side Effects And Drug Resistance Associated With Chemotherapy Tackled By Nanotechnology
Filed under: Biology / Biochemistry, Breast Cancer, Cancer / Oncology, Ovarian Cancer
Huixin He, associate professor of nanoscale chemistry at Rutgers University, Newark, and Tamara Minko, professor at the Rutgers Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, have developed a nanotechnology approach that could potentially eliminate the problems of side effects and drug resistance in the treatment of cancer. Under traditional chemotherapy, cancer cells, like bacteria, can develop resistance to drug therapy, leading to a relapse of the disease.
As reported in the December 21, 2009, issue of the journal Small, He, Minko and their co-researchers, including investigators from Merck & Co. and Carl Zeiss SMT, a global nanotechnology firm, have designed nanomaterials that allow for the delivery of both a chemical (doxorubicin) to destroy cancer cells and a genetic drug to prevent drug resistance.
When administered to drug-resistant ovarian cancer cells, the treatment was more than 130 times lethal than when doxorubicin was administrated alone. “The drug can only be released when it is inside the cancer cells,” He said. “This controlled internal release mechanism can dramatically eliminate side effects associated with anticancer drugs to normal tissues.”
Battling Aggressive Breast Cancer with Nanotubes
In related research, Professor He and another team of co-researchers have developed single-walled carbon nanotubes that hold the potential of providing a more effective means for detecting and selectively destroying aggressive breast cancer cells. Read more
Genetics 2010: Model Organisms To Human Biology Meeting
Filed under: Biology / Biochemistry, Cancer / Oncology, Genetics
The Genetics Society of America (GSA) is pleased to announce its meeting, “GENETICS 2010: Model Organisms to Human Biology,” June 12-15, 2010, at the Sheraton Boston, Massachusetts. This biannual meeting brings together investigators who study genetic models in flies, yeast, fungi, mice and other non-human organisms, with researchers in human genetics. Keynote speakers include Carol Greider, the 2009 Nobel laureate in Physiology or Medicine, Gary Ruvkun, a 2008 Lasker Award winner, and Jeremy Berg, Director, NIGMS/NIH.
SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM
Keynote Speakers:
Saturday, June 12, 2010: Gary Ruvkun, Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, 2008 Lasker Award winner
Sunday, June 13, 2010: Carol Greider, The Johns Hopkins University, 2009 Nobel laureate
Monday, June 14, 2010: Jeremy Berg, Director, NIGMS/NIH
Plenary Sessions:
Invited Plenary Scientific Sessions will offer the opportunity to learn about the latest research in these fields. These sessions include invited speakers and those selected from among the submitted abstracts.
- Personal Genomics
- Cancer as a Genetic Disease
- Models of Disease
- Sex and Gene Expression
- Neurogenetics: From Synapses to Senescence
- Modern Approach to Pathogenesis and Infectious Disease
- Analyzing Genomes
- Organismal Architecture and Developmental Disabilities
- Stem Cells: The Genetics of Commitment
