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Science News

Scientists Unlock Reasons Cancer Spreads 293

* * Beatles-Beatles writes "Instead of a cell just breaking off from a tumor and traveling through the bloodstream to another organ where it forms a secondary tumour, or metastasis, researchers in the United States have shown that the cancer sends out envoys to prepare the new site."
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Scientists Unlock Reasons Cancer Spreads

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  • by ndansmith ( 582590 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:05AM (#14209034)
    Slashdot: Spam for Readers. Page Rank for * * Beatles-Beatles.
    • The funny thing is that site is full of copyrighted stuff. That is a dangerous position for someone to hold who is pissing off slashdot. How much will that pagerank be worth after say a DMCA takedown of the page?
    • I don't get the big deal here. The guy is submitting legitimate articles, and the /. editors obviously see enough value in them to put them on the front page.

      So he's getting something out of it, and he's got an alterior motive. So what? Is it really hurting the way you browse the site? You have to admit that this is a newsworthy story. It's not like he's submitting nonsense and then reaping rewards for it.

      If you have that big a problem, don't click on his stories, and don't follow his links. Otherwise
      • by dorkygeek ( 898295 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @11:17AM (#14210455) Journal

        Then please reread my earlier comment about this guy:

        Ok, let's have a look at his george-harrison.info website. Aha, maybe the links at the bottom of the page? Yes, I see: http://george-harrison.info/reciprocal-links.html [george-harrison.info] [george-harrison.info].

        Sooo, what may be on that page? Quoting:

        Our reciprocal links page. These links are useful for website promotion, link trades, and generating traffic to your site. There are many sites with useful products, services, programs, business opportunities, information, and free stuff.

        All reciprocal links have been manually screened before getting on this page. Webmasters that post links on this page, also promote this Links Page on their site too. If you want to add your link and become a member of this reciprocal links page, just click on the top link for details. It's free to join.

        Looking at the link list (just a small excerpt):

        Guaranteed Dropship Wholesalers business directory source

        Good Vibrations for Singles - Free Dating, Love, Romance, and Friendship

        Collection Agency - Williams, Cohen & Gray

        Trade Links - Link Swap Page

        Personals Dating Affiliate Program - Instant Sign-Up

        ProfitsRup2U For Successful Internet Marketing

        Trade links page - reciprocal links page

        HTH!

    • Slashdot: Spam for Readers. Page Rank for * * Beatles-Beatles.

      I have a question about this: how is what he's doing functionally any different than if I were to comment on the artical (as I'm doing right now) and change my URL for every comment? Now that I think about it, how is what he's doing worse than what I'm doing, since I have a URL of my own attached to this comment? Is it because he keeps changing his URL? Would I be guilty of the same offense if I changed my URL to one that isn't associated w

    • Do not say the word Eatlesbay on the page, or it'll increase his page rank even more.
  • by mattjb0010 ( 724744 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:07AM (#14209040) Homepage
    ...the spread of **Beatles articles.
  • Imagine (Score:2, Funny)

    by quokkapox ( 847798 )
    Imagine no possesions,
    I wonder if you can,
    No need for greed or hunger,
    A brotherhood of man,
    Imagine all the people
    Sharing all the world...

    <p> Just imagine a world without pagerank pirates like ** * Beatles Beatles *
  • by gibbo2 ( 58897 )
    "Fibronectin, which acts like a glue to attract and trap the bone marrow cells to create a landing pad or nest for the cancer cells."

    Maybe they can sythesize something which is able to bond to Fibronectin? If they flooded the bloodstream with it, it could use up all the landing pads and effectively block the cancer from attaching anywhere.

    Kinda like a Denial of Service on a molecular level...?
    • by Muhammar ( 659468 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:33AM (#14209130)
      I think much better approach is to identify these marrow-stimulating factors that are produced by tumors. Once you are able to shut off this signaling (by making therapeutic antibodies against these factors, by developing an antagonist for their receptors, etc), you won't have to mess with fibronectin (which has useful function in cell adhesion elsewhere).

      • I agree, that is a much better solution. More importantly though, these landing pads are not a natural part of the body so denying the ability for them to be created is much more beneficial to the short term prospects of the patient. I am pretty sure they would have an adverse affect on the cells around them, even without cancer taking hold.

        Now a good question would be, how did cancer, something that doesn't spread between people, come up with something that clever? I guess after enough mutations of the
        • "Now a good question would be, how did cancer, something that doesn't spread between people, come up with something that clever? I guess after enough mutations of the cells they could produce a protein to trigger it off but that would be an impressive accidental mutation."
          This is probably not that much of a mutation at all. I could see how this could be used in organ formation. The landing pad is built where a certain type of cell needs to cluster like liver cells. They clump and grow into a liver.
          I am not
        • ...these landing pads are not a natural part of the body....

          When I read TFA I didn't find anything to suggest that this is case. Did you learn this from other sources, or is this supposition?

          It seems to me that it is just as likely that these "landing pads" are usually a normal mechanism of health maintenance that has been subverted by the cancer. For example, it would not surprise me to learn that "landing pad" formation is a normal and important step in mending a broken bone (callus formation). The a

    • by Maset ( 190867 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @07:39AM (#14209274)
      But then most (if not all) of the body's organs that rely on fibronectin will suffer if not die.

      Targeting such a widespread protein is not the answer, and is not the answer that researchers are looking at. Otherwise there would have been a large headline stating that anti-fibronectin drugs/antibodies cure metastisis.
    • There is already something like that. I have leukemia (Chronic myeloid). The chemo drug (gleevec) that I am on is an enzyme that specifically bonds to the protein associated with the cancerous cell. It not only is supposed to inhibit growth, but it also actively destroys the cancer cells (and only the cancer cells). pretty impressive stuff, but for 3000 USD a bottle, it had better be pretty damn good.
      • Just a clarification, Gleevec(STI571/Imatinib) isn't an enzyme. Its a small-molecule tyrosine kinase inhibitor that binds to the kinase Abl (which in chronic myeloid leukemia is constituative activated through fusion with the Bcr protein). The drug binds to ATP-binding pocket in the catalytic domain of Abl.

        Gleevec happens to be the first FDA-approved kinase inhibitor. The field of kinase inhibitors for use in cancer is now quite large, although approval of new kinase ihibitor drugs has been slow.
    • Maybe they can sythesize something which is able to bond to Fibronectin? If they flooded the bloodstream with it, it could use up all the landing pads and effectively block the cancer from attaching anywhere. Kinda like a Denial of Service on a molecular level...?

      One problem that I know off the top of my head is that blocking fibronectin is going to impair mental function. Fibronectin is used in the brain to bind polysialic acid, a "grease for the neurons". So if you bind up the fibronectin, your neur

  • by neatflux ( 929822 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:13AM (#14209060)
    What, no comparisons to Microsoft yet?
  • w00t! (Score:5, Funny)

    by digismack ( 262459 ) <digismack@gmail.com> on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:17AM (#14209074) Homepage
    Yes! One step closer to finding the cure for cancer. /me lights another Marlboro...
  • by Quirk ( 36086 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:18AM (#14209080) Homepage Journal
    The article mentioned ordinary bone marrow cells, but recent reports have cited... "Bone marrow stem cells, [medterms.com] for example, are the most primitive cells in the marrow. From them all the various types of blood cells are descended. Bone marrow stem-cell transfusions (or transplants) were originally given to replace various types of blood cells."

    "Stem cells from bone marrow can also, quite remarkably, give rise to non-marrow cells"

    Do bone marrow cells exhibit pluripotent characteristics that lend them to the use metastasis puts them to?

    • ...Do bone marrow cells exhibit pluripotent characteristics that lend them to the use metastasis puts them to?...
      Evolution does tend to use what's at hand.
    • by paulsgre ( 890463 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @11:13AM (#14210409)
      Metastasis is merely the movement of a tumor colony to another part of the body. Bone marrow cells are no more useful as a metastasic cell than as any other cell type, because cancer reverts whatever tissue it initially attacks back to a pluripotent state.
      What cancer cells DO is cause differentiated cells to become pluripotent. Every cell has the same DNA inside it, but most of the DNA is suppressed after development and only the specialized genes for that cell are expressed. Cancer arises when DNA suppression and replication machinery is hijacked and the cell becomes chaotically embryonic in nature, proliferating not only through wild replication but by abusing the cell's ability to produce hormones and other cell to cell signalling molecules.
      Carcinogens, oncogenes, and onco-viruses all cause cancer by essentially turning on a cell's replication machinery and reverting the cells back to pluripotent and proliferative states, regardless of the state of differentiation that they were previously in. If anything, my guess would be that bone-marrow cells are more resistant to cancerous agents, because they spend extended periods of time in a pluripotent state without dividing out of control, and probably have expression and activation feedback systems that keep them in check that other cells don't necessarily express.
      • ... the cell becomes chaotically embryonic in nature,...

        ...all cause cancer by essentially turning on a cell's replication machinery and reverting the cells back to pluripotent and proliferative states,...

        By the above is it then fair to say that teratoma [emedicine.com], ( "The best evidence suggests that most [teratoma] are due to abnormal differentiation of fetal germ cells that arise from the fetal yolk sac..." )..." made up of a variety of parenchymal cell types representative of more than a single germ layer, usual

  • by UR30 ( 603039 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:19AM (#14209085) Homepage
    Let's quote the philospher-poet D.H. Rumsfeld [slate.com] on this:
    The Unknown
    As we know,
    There are known knowns.
    There are things we know we know.
    We also know
    There are known unknowns.
    That is to say
    We know there are some things
    We do not know.
    But there are also unknown unknowns,
    The ones we don't know
    We don't know.
    • Lol what an excellent link!

      Really funny (and I bet he would laugh too) and at times eerily zen-like :)
    • The Unknown
      As we know,
      There are known knowns.
      There are things we know we know.
      We also know
      There are known unknowns.
      That is to say
      We know there are some things
      We do not know.
      But there are also unknown unknowns,
      The ones we don't know
      We don't know.


      The above is actually an old chestnut of management wisdom that Rummy picked up from his days in private industry. Rumsfeld wasn't being stupid or crazy, he was just being unoriginal.
      • This originally came from St. Augustine. (The Lockheed Prez, not the other one).

        It's actually a very profound observation, something along the lines of:

        • When you look over predictions versus final results you find:
        • Costs exceed estimates by 40%.
        • Unexpected costs exceed estimated unexpected costs by 50%.
        • Delays exceed estimated delays by 35%.

        So there's things you know (We wanna build an airplane, around $10 mil each).

        Things you think you know (It's likely going to cost $13 million)

        things you know

    • Then there are the unknown knowns,
      The things we don't know
      We know,
      But that direct and constrain our thinking anyway.
      There are unknown known knowns,
      The things we don't know
      Even though we know
      We know them.
      These are things we think we know,
      But we're way off base.
      There are known known unknowns,
      The things we know
      We do not know,
      Without realizing
      We actually know them.
      These are questions we keep asking
      When the answers
      Are staring us in the face.
      There are also unknown unknown knowns,
      The things we don't know
      We know,
      Bu
  • Link to the article (Score:4, Informative)

    by Hrshgn ( 595514 ) <rince2001@gm x . ch> on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:20AM (#14209086)
    Here's the link to the original article for those who have access: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v438/n7069/fu ll/nature04186.html [nature.com] There's also a commentary in the same issue: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v438/n7069/fu ll/438750b.html [nature.com] Greetings, Hrshgn
  • by chub_mackerel ( 911522 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:20AM (#14209090)

    I've always thought the wiser thing would be for a President to proclaim that we shall cure cancer within the next decade. Rather than the tired old Moo... er, Mars thing.

    Assuming validity to this story, it seems such a thing might be possible.

    A nice side benefit is that the government money involved goes less into the military-industrial complex, and more into medical research. Yes, I know that there are still military applications to any such research... nevertheless it would be nice if the government's research money was targeted directly and explicitly at a benefit to humanity. A cure for cancer falls in that category.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Have you ever hear of the National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Center? A ton of government money has been going into cancer research for decades. A problem is that cancer is not a single entity, it is hundreds of different diseases. Tremendous progress has been made, but it is unlikely we will ever make any single discovery that can be called "the cure for cancer".

      • Also... (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Belial6 ( 794905 )
        We have cured many types of cancer. When someone finds out that they have cancer, the first question is no longer "How long have I got?", it is now "Is it curable?".
    • Mars is a single object, it's big, we know where it is, what rules it follows and how to hit it.

      It makes a difference.

      KFG
    • Nixon beat you to it (Score:4, Informative)

      by mariox19 ( 632969 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @07:42AM (#14209284)

      Google "Nixon war on cancer" and see what you come up with. Sadly, it's an example of governmental hubris.

    • There have been no reported cases of cancer on Mars in any reputable medical journal. We need to go there and find out why!
    • I've always thought the wiser thing would be for a President to proclaim that we shall cure cancer within the next decade. Rather than the tired old Moo... er, Mars thing.

      Been there. Done that. President Nixon launched a "War on Cancer" to find a cure within a decade [www.snh.cc].
  • by xtracto ( 837672 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @06:27AM (#14209107) Journal
    From the rip of a http://science.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=169603 &cid=14134565>rip:

    I'm recycling a comment from another AC in another Scuttlemonkey/**Beatles-Beatles post. This guy's getting worse than Roland Picklepail:

    Am I the only person who has noticed the numerous stories that get posted by *--Beatles-Beatles? Am I also the only person who has noticed that the link used in is name is a constantly changing URL (depending on the story) with pointers to various scammy sites? Is it not obvious what he's doing? He's using the awesome PageRank of slashdot do promote his sites based on searches that have the word Beatles in them.

    It's a small price to pay for free advertising. Find a story, summarize it in 5 minutes, post to slashdot, and get a pagerank boost that advertisers would pay hundreds (or maybe thousands) for. (Text links on high-ranking sites is big business - just ask oreilly).

    Slashdot should at least put a ref=nofollow in the links to submitters (or better yet, only link the submitter's name to his/her user page).

    In closing, a quick bit of WHOIS shows that all the sites linked by **B-B are registered to Carl Fogle. Carl, cut this crap out.
  • With the interception of these cancer 'envoys', we finally can 'kill the messenger' and not feel so bad about it.
  • FTA: "These nests provide attachment factors for the tumor cells to implant and nurture them. It causes them not only to bind but to proliferate. Once that all takes place we have a fully formed metastatic site or secondary tumor," said Lyden.

    I think this is how Windows spreads also. Check out this mildly re-written version of the above:

    "These proprietary APIs provide attachment factors for the 3rd party applications to implant and nurture them. It causes them not only to bind but to proliferate. Onc
  • We are fighting a war: a war on cancer

    And we are losing.
  • by SilverspurG ( 844751 ) * on Thursday December 08, 2005 @08:53AM (#14209484) Homepage Journal
    I'm surprised that so many researchers still view cancer as a sentient malicious being living within a biological system.

    Cells have a language that they use to communicate. They communicate with the cells in the other tissues around them. They communicate with the blood cells as they pass by. They communicate with the various cells of the immune system. This communication is constant. Every cell is constantly emitting and absorbing a matrix of cytokines, lymphokines, and other chemokines. It is from the interpretation of all of these different levels that a cell adapts and responds to its environment.

    Cancerous cells are simply responding to their environment. In many ways a cancerous cell is malfunctioning. In many ways the set of chemokines which it emits acknowledges that it's malfunctioning. In a body with a healthy immune system the immune response is properly recruited and the cancerous cells are put out of their misery. This is why babies can grow so quickly with so little chance for deformity. The cells are communicating properly and the body ensures that any malfunctioning cells are removed.

    In a cancer, when a cell begins malfunctioning, the immune system is not notified of the problem. The surrounding cells, when exposed to the proper levels of the signaling molecules, may be programmed to imitate the same behavior. I believe that this is part of a larger process that's supposed to work to increase the intensity of the signal and attract the immune system. If the immune system is not properly recruited, though, then the originating cells divide and become more and more degenerate and the increased level, intensity, and garbled nature of the signal aggravates even more cells in the area. When sufficiently aggravated without any response to attenuate the signals from the malfunctioning cells then more and more proper cells will begin to show signs of chemical stress and become cancerous, necrotic, or apoptotic.

    In some cases the original cancerous cell may not be technically malfunctioning. That cell may be responding appropriately to surrounding tissue which has become numb and nonfunctional. This can be seen in bone cancers where the osteoblast count is at extreme low levels. The remaining osteoblasts are tired, overworked, stressed, and more than a little frightened by the absence of their comrades. Those cells begin exhibiting chemical signs of that stress meant to recruit the repropagation of other osteoblasts. If the situation isn't remedied, however, it's very easy to think that the osteoblast is evilly trying to metastasize. In tissues of high cell censity (kidney, pancreas, stomach, intestine, brain) it's most likely that the cancer is a result of a malfunctioning immune system. In a tissue of low cell density (bone) it's most likely that the cancer is a result of a deficiency in the tissue itself--maybe a logical sign of natural aging.

    At any given point in time any one of us has a number of cancerous cells in our body. They're not sentiently floating around looking for tissue to victimize--they're doing what they've been programmed to do: survive.

    The real question has always been: Why isn't the immune system responding appropriately? In most cancers the immune system is responding improperly or flat-out ignoring the problem. The studies of immunologists on the pathways of intercell signaling is very important research but sorely underfunded because research and study rarely leads to quick quarterly profit. There are easily hundreds of different intercell signaling molecules all tailored for their own specific message. The field is so complex that it's very difficult to quantify progress in the eyes of the business managers who have no conceptual understanding of the task or the technology.
    • by emoi ( 937230 )
      And this begs the question: what is the evolutionnary benefit of cancer? If cancer is propagated not just because cancer cells are detached from the original location and travel to another location (randomly?), but rather cancer cells inducing the propagation of cancer through a communication mechanism (not random?)... what competitive / evolutionnary advantages does this spreading of cancer bring?
      • And this begs the question: what is the evolutionnary benefit of cancer?
        Why does it have to be a benefit, why can't evolution sometimes make a bad turn, am I alone in thinking that not every mutation has to be a good one.

        PS. I still prefer the old meaning of "Begging the question"
        • Why does it have to be a benefit, why can't evolution sometimes make a bad turn, am I alone in thinking that not every mutation has to be a good one.

          If it was one single mutation, that had no benefits except it causes cancer... in each generation, part of the bearers of the mutation would die before they had bred, and each generation the percentage of people(*) having the mutation would go down. It's just extremely unlikely that such a mutation would spread to affect the whole of humanity.

          What's much mo

          • by yeuph ( 452290 )

            This post responds to the entire thread above.

            The nature of genetic diseases is such that a even though there may be no survival benefits to a certain trait, it is propagated in the gene pool for multiple generations until it either mutates into a useful trait, or is finally selected out of the population. The genetics of cancer is such that cancers fall into two broad classes. Quick, very deadly cancers of the young, which come from usually a single serious mutation, and slower cancers of the old, which

      • It may bring none. Not all mutations are beneficial. On the other hand, it may be a measure to limit population expansion, or it may simply be an unfortunate side effect of some other process which we desperately need to survive.
      • There are a few issues with your question:

        1. It isn't a foregone conclusion that there even has to be an evolutionary advantage to having cancer, as evolution tends to not have much bearing on post-reproductive-aged organisms. There clearly would be a selection against organsisms who have pre-reproductive cancer, as they are less likely to reproduce.

        2. One possible evolutionary advantage of cancer is that it gets rid of old parents, thus allowing more food for the young and reproductive offspring. On th
      • There isn't one, but there's no reason why there should be. MOST cancer strikes people who are considerably older than anyone was likely to be back in the days when humanity was still undergoing evolution. Most cancer is simply random genetic damage that happens to hit something critical (like a tumor suppressant gene) and a "hey, my DNA is damaged, time to suicide" gene at the same time. We have evolved all kinds of mechanisms to make this kind of cancer unlikely during a survival-of-the-fittest style l
    • by Kupek ( 75469 )
      I'm surprised that so many researchers still view cancer as a sentient malicious being living within a biological system.

      Did anyone explicity or implicitly say it is?
    • by milimetric ( 840694 ) on Thursday December 08, 2005 @02:13PM (#14212062) Journal
      holy crap dude, if all you said is really true, you're pretty smart. Also, if that is the case, and from the tone of your post, I'm assuming that you're involved with immunology. So you have a problem selling this type of research to potential investors and business partners? Maybe I have an idea: I have no idea of the technical aspects of the following, IANAD-HNEFC (I am not a doctor - heh, not even freakin close).

      What if you sell it by saying that research into this field will not only prove beneficial to killing cancer but will also prove beneficial to killing HIV, because HIV is a disease that kills the immune system (lol, wow, only a business person would believe in that connection). Use the words "killing" and use AIDS instead of HIV. Repeat these words with a loud megaphone directly into the ears of the business and marketting people. Killing Cancer and AIDS sells. Studying immunology in order to find out why cancerous cells that are communicating with the immune system are being ignored does not sell.

      Anyway, best of luck to you, and I didn't meant to sound too trivial in the above, just trying to explain that marketing is not about what's right, it's about what's louder.

      Dan
    • The surrounding cells, when exposed to the proper levels of the signaling molecules, may be programmed to imitate the same behavior.

      Is it known if cancerous cells spread in this manner? I was under the impression that cancers spread from a single cell that divides into the growth, not that surrounding cells could become "infected."
  • ...but very interesting, and the first thing I'd ask is, if metastatic cancers require this "system" to operate in order to be successful, then why are so many carcinomas malignant? Shouldn't we be seeing a lot more benign growths that require only a simple, surgical extraction? Perhaps this behavior serves a more mundane use and is often already active. Unfortunately that means drugs to inhibit it might produce some very unwelcome side effects.
    • Carcinomas are statistically malignant because the vast majority of them get removed by the immune system when they're a collection of little more than 25-50 malfunctioning cells. If a carcinoma makes it to a physically noticeable size, or a size where its chemical output has a drastic effect on overall health, then there's a good bet that the carcinoma has the immune system at bay. It's usually the degradation in the immune system resulting from fighting a carcinoma that allows the drastic effect on over
  • This really makes me think. I always thought cancer were just defects in cells that caused them to multiply like crazy. But now it turns out that cancer is something like a living being, a parasite invading a host.

    So, perhaps cancer IS caused by a virus (like the Human Papiloma virus)? Perhaps this unknown virus managed to implant its genetic code in humans and this was passed to future generations? You know, I'd really like to have someone sequence the genome of cancerous cells. Who knows what other surpri
  • Surely it should be "the method"

    The clue is in the headline of the article :

    "Scientists discover how cancer spreads"

    not why

  • http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/transcripts/2805cance r.html [pbs.org]

    This is old news... Nova ran a special on this back in 2001! But that's what you get for paying attention to mainstream media (msnbc, in this case), instead of PBS, NPR, and scientific journals.

    • No, it's new news (Score:3, Informative)

      by tigre ( 178245 )
      As far as I can tell, the article and the Nova special are talking about different things. The former is about cell attractors, whereas the latter is about blood vessel growth. Important, but different, parts of the puzzle.
  • Still no cure for cancer. But we're getting closer.
  • the cause of cancer [kithfan.org] was discovered about a decade ago.

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