Date: 7/11/2012 13:15:58
From: Dropbear
ID: 225106
Subject: Mole rats don't get cancer

Apparently mole rats develop protiens which can kill off cells and surrounding cells if they multiply too quickly. Quite cool!

Second mole rat species has different mechanism for resisting cancer

IMAGE: A blind mole rat is shown on the background of dying necrotic blind mole rat cells. Click here for more information.

Biologists at the University of Rochester have determined how blind mole rats fight off cancer—and the mechanism differs from what they discovered three years ago in another long-lived and cancer-resistant mole rat species, the naked mole rat.

The team of researchers, led by Professor Vera Gorbunova and Assistant Professor Andrei Seluanov, found that abnormally growing cells in blind mole rats secrete the interferon beta protein, which causes those cells to rapidly die. Seluanov and Gorbunova hope the discovery will eventually help lead to new cancer therapies in humans. Their findings are being published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Blind mole rats and naked mole rats—both subterranean rodents with long life spans—are the only mammals never known to develop cancer. Three years ago, Seluanov and Gorbunova determined the anti-cancer mechanism in the naked mole rat. Their research found that a specific gene—p16—makes the cancerous cells in naked mole rats hypersensitive to overcrowding, and stops them from proliferating when too many crowd together.

“We expected blind mole rats to have a similar mechanism for stopping the spread of cancerous cells,” said Seluanov. “Instead, we discovered they’ve evolved their own mechanism.”

Gorbunova and Seluanov made their discovery by isolating cells from blind mole rats and forcing them to proliferate in culture beyond what occurs in the animal. After dividing approximately 15-20 times, all of the cells in the culture dish died rapidly. The researchers determined that the rapid death occurred because the cells recognized their pre-cancerous state and began secreting a suicidal protein, called interferon beta. The precancerous cells died by a mechanism which kills both abnormal cells and their neighbors, resulting in a “clean sweep.”

“Not only were the cancerous cells killed off, but so were the adjacent cells, which may also be prone to tumorous behavior,” said Seluanov.

“While people don’t use the same cancer-killing mechanism as blind mole rats, we may be able to combat some cancers and prolong life, if we could stimulate the same clean sweep reaction in cancerous human cells,” said Gorbunova.

The research team also included Christopher Hine, Xiao Tian, and Julia Ablaeva in Rochester, Andrei Gudkov at Roswell Park Cancer Institute in Buffalo, NY, and Eviatar Nevo at the University of Haifa in Israel.

Gorbunova and Seluanov say they next want to find out exactly what triggers the secretion of interferon beta after cancerous cells begin proliferating in blind mole rats.

Gorbunova believes the anti-cancer mechanism is an adaptation to subterranean life. “Blind mole rats spend their lives in underground burrows protected from predators,” said Gorbunova. “Living in this environment, they could perhaps afford to evolve a long lifespan, which includes developing efficient anti-cancer defenses.”

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-11/uor-rdh110512.php

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Date: 7/11/2012 13:18:37
From: Dropbear
ID: 225108
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

more links

http://www.nature.com/news/blind-mole-rats-may-hold-key-to-cancer-1.11741

http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2012-11/06/blind-mole-rate-cancer

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Date: 7/11/2012 13:18:43
From: diddly-squat
ID: 225109
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

seems a fair compensation for being a naked mole rat

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Date: 7/11/2012 13:23:12
From: poikilotherm
ID: 225112
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

They are a little late…that particular cytokine has been and is being studied as chemo/genetherapy for humans.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15546502

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Date: 7/11/2012 13:23:15
From: Divine Angel
ID: 225113
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

If I’d known this last week, I could have added it to my daily animal facts on fb. The naked mole rat was featured a few days ago.

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Date: 7/11/2012 19:47:03
From: wookiemeister
ID: 225444
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

years ago some scottish dude found that triggering a fever got rid of cancer/ tumours

this then galvanised the immune system into finding anomalies and killing them

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Date: 7/11/2012 19:49:42
From: Boris
ID: 225447
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

yeah people here thought touching an electric fence cured ross river fever. don’t hear about that cure now.

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Date: 7/11/2012 19:50:53
From: roughbarked
ID: 225450
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

Boris said:


yeah people here thought touching an electric fence cured ross river fever. don’t hear about that cure now.

and you didn’t educate them?

So who did?
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Date: 7/11/2012 19:51:55
From: Peak Warming Man
ID: 225452
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

>>yeah people here thought touching an electric fence cured ross river fever. don’t hear about that cure now.

It’s been eradicated.

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Date: 7/11/2012 19:54:12
From: wookiemeister
ID: 225453
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

Boris said:


yeah people here thought touching an electric fence cured ross river fever. don’t hear about that cure now.

it was a scottish doctor who deliberately triggered a fever – it seemed to work

when i was peering into my step fathers casket i noticed that a mole on his face had mushroomed into the size of a 20c piece over a few weeks according to my mother , just before he died.

it seems to me that when the immune system collapsed the cancer then spread like wildfire throughout his body

if you have a good immune system it makes me wonder if you would get cancer/ tumour

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Date: 7/11/2012 19:54:38
From: Boris
ID: 225455
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

has not.

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Date: 7/11/2012 19:56:47
From: wookiemeister
ID: 225456
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

maybe just like ulcers, theres a particular bacteria that causes cancers?

the bacteria even tually dies but it leaves the time bomb behind where it resided?

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Date: 7/11/2012 19:58:48
From: Boris
ID: 225457
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

A FAKE doctor who claimed to cure cancer by stripping victims and using an electric shock machine on them has been given eight years in jail.

Wheelchair-bound Reginald Gill, 77, and wife Leila, 35, sexually abused two women after falsely diagnosing them at an “alternative medical centre” run from their home.

Gill told one her cancer could be cured by having her breasts sucked.

Only later did real doctors discover neither of the women had the disease.

Gill, from Cwmduad, West Wales, also falsely claimed to have been a British Army doctor.

He was found guilty of three sexual assaults, six assaults and two counts of fraud. His wife was given six months for sexual assault and fraud at Swansea Crown Court.

Prosecutor Huw Rees said the pair “used false diagnosis of cancer for their sexual satisfaction”.

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/4251750/Perv-doc-gets-8-years-in-jail-for-br-sex-scam.html

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Date: 7/11/2012 20:00:43
From: Bubble Car
ID: 225458
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

>Gill told one her cancer could be cured by having her breasts sucked.

Disturbing that he could find anyone who would actually believe that.

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Date: 7/11/2012 20:02:29
From: jjjust moi
ID: 225459
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

Bubble Car said:


>Gill told one her cancer could be cured by having her breasts sucked.

Disturbing that he could find anyone who would actually believe that.


You mean that’s a lie?

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Date: 7/11/2012 20:02:37
From: Boris
ID: 225460
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

Disturbing that he could find any

there’s a suckee born every minute.

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Date: 7/11/2012 20:02:55
From: wookiemeister
ID: 225461
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

Bubble Car said:


>Gill told one her cancer could be cured by having her breasts sucked.

Disturbing that he could find anyone who would actually believe that.


i suspect that in that case air on the brain was the root cause

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Date: 7/11/2012 20:03:48
From: Arts
ID: 225462
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

lol jj

terrible

hehehehehe

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Date: 7/11/2012 20:10:02
From: wookiemeister
ID: 225465
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

i don’t worry about cancer much

if i ever get it i’ll just eat some apricot seeds

i’ve started eating some recently to see if i can “kill” myself again

its a bit of a stretch because they aren’t sweet. i cracked a few in the vice i made at the apprentice workshop years ago (not a bad vice, i’ve been thinking of making some more and handing them out at xmas.

ideally i’d need a mill to do this to make the jaws and something to cut out the metal plate before milling it.

a welder would be nice.

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Date: 8/11/2012 07:58:28
From: morrie
ID: 225610
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

I wonder how/why the mole rats developed this? A chance mutation or might there have been a stronger than normal forcing agent?

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Date: 8/11/2012 08:15:23
From: roughbarked
ID: 225612
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

morrie said:


I wonder how/why the mole rats developed this? A chance mutation or might there have been a stronger than normal forcing agent?

Probably the former but it could have been both. It is interesting.

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Date: 8/11/2012 08:52:55
From: Peak Warming Man
ID: 225614
Subject: re: Mole rats don't get cancer

“Gorbunova believes the anti-cancer mechanism is an adaptation to subterranean life. “Blind mole rats spend their lives in underground burrows protected from predators,” said Gorbunova. “Living in this environment, they could perhaps afford to evolve a long lifespan, which includes developing efficient anti-cancer defenses.”

I don’t understand that.

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