Sunday, May 24, 2009

A Cure for the Common Cancer

A QUANTUM OF SCIENCE

What can the common cold do to help fight cancer?

Behold one of the most successful organisms in the history of the world: the humble adenovirus, better known as the cold. Human have recorded suffering from this virus since at least Hippocritas, and likely much earlier. Every year humans around the world come down with runny noses, coughs and fevers associated with the cold. And then they spread it to others, and recover - until the next round. Adenoviruses are among the handful of true success stories in biology. Now, scientists have found a way to harness the infectivity of the common cold to make it serve a therapeutic function, not an epidemiological one.

Recently, a group of scientists led by Dr. Leonard Seymour of Oxford University reported successfully removing the "disease" genes from a adenovirus and replacing them with genes for cancerous proteins. Why would this help? In the same way that your body's immune system eventually learns to recognize and attack normal adenoviruses that manage to infect you, the modified adenovirus contains cancer-linked genes that provide the immune system with the opportunity to "learn" that these proteins are invaders to be fought, potentially turning the immune system into the most potent and selective anti-cancer fighter possible.

Scientists have managed similar feats before but to do so they have had to weaken the virus, making it less effective at stimulating the immune system and teaching it to recognize cancer proteins as invaders to be fought. With this achievement, Dr. Seymour and his collaborators have taken a large step forward into a burgeoning field of therapeutics drawn from biological strategies older than humanity itself.

For more inforation:
http://www.plospathogens.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.ppat.1000440

(C) AQOS / Peter Smalley (2009)

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