Some small RNA molecules can selectively kill cultured human cancer cells, leaving healthy cells untouched, according to a study published online yesterday (6th September) in PNAS -- a feat that has surpassed conventional cancer therapies that kill indiscriminately, causing an array of side effects in patients.
"It's a novel approach that will bring about new and cool things in the field," said linkurl:Andrew Ellington,;http://ellingtonlab.org/index.html a biotechnologist at the University of Texas at Austin, who was not involved in the research. And with 7.6 million cancer-related deaths worldwide in 2007, according to the American Cancer Society, there is an "urgent need for new approaches to cancer treatment," linkurl:Niles Pierce,;http://www.piercelab.caltech.edu/ bioengineer at the California Institute of Technology and lead author of the study, said in an email to The Scientist. While traditional chemotherapies effectively annihilate cancer cells, they...
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target for this therapy. Image: Wikimedia commons, user Nephron |
S. Venkataraman et al., "Selective cell death mediated by small conditional RNAs," PNAS, doi: 10.1073/pnas.1006377107
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