Why some cancers become malignant and others don’t

By ANI
Friday, January 7, 2011

WASHINGTON - Scientists have discovered why some cancers become malignant and others don’t.

The study, led by Dr. Gerardo Ferbeyre of the University of Montreal’s Department of Biochemistry, found that cancer cells reproduce by dividing in two, but a molecule known as PML limits how many times this can happen.

The team proved that malignant cancers have problems with this molecule, meaning that in its absence they can continue to grow and eventually spread to other organs.

Importantly, the presence of PML molecules can easily be detected, and could serve to diagnose whether a tumor is malignant or not.

“We discovered that benign cancer cells produce the PML molecule and display abundant PML bodies, keeping them in a dormant, senescent state. Malignant cancer cells either don’t make or fail to organize PML bodies, and thus proliferate uncontrollably,” Ferbeyre said.

Senescence is the mature stage in a cell’s life at which in can no longer reproduce and it is a natural defense against cancer formation. When tumor cells are benign, it means that they cannot spread or grow into other parts of the body.

The team of researchers based both on campus and at the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre built on Dr. Ferbeyre’s prior discovery that PML is able to force cells to enter senescence.

The research was published on January 1, 2011 in Genes and Development. (ANI)

Filed under: Science and Technology

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