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Protein key cancer-killer treatment

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A key to killing treatment-resistant cancers may have been found in the a technique known as RNA interference, which “knocks out” particular proteins.

One such, the “kinase” enzyme STK33, is seen by scientists as a particularly promising target since it appears to be necessary for the survival of many cancer tumours.

Says Dr Gary Gilliland at Harvard Medical School in Boston: “The beauty of the strategy is that it would take only 50% to 70% knockdown of STK33 to kill a cancer cell. It relies on a unique frailty of the cancer cell that normal cells don’t have.”

This avenue of research focuses on defects in the KRAS gene, which is linked to notoriously difficult-to-treat pancreatic and lung cancers and leukaemia.

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Researchers are using RNA interference to study normal, healthy genes that cancers rely on for their survival. The effect of 1,000 human genes on eight cancer-cell lines are being investigated.

By “knocking out” proteins, it is possible to determine their effects by using small bits of genetic material to block protein-making machinery.

Copyright Press Association 2009

Harvard Medical School






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