Gene Identified As DNA Protector
Posted on: Thursday, 3 August 2006, 21:00 CDT
U.S. researchers say they've determined a single gene may function as a previously unidentified tumor suppressor.
The scientists from the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center at the University of Texas say they believe the gene plays a pivotal role, launching two DNA damage detection and repair pathways in the human genome.
Writing in the advance online edition of the journal Cancer Cell, the researchers say the gene -- called BRIT1 -- is under-expressed in human ovarian, breast and prostate cancer cell lines.
Defects in BRIT1 seem to be a key pathological alteration in cancer initiation and progression, the authors note, and further understanding of its function may contribute to novel, therapeutic approaches to cancer.
Disruption of BRIT1 function abolishes DNA damage responses and leads to genomic instability, said senior author Shiaw-Yih Lin, an assistant professor of molecular therapeutics.
Genomic instability fuels the initiation, growth and spread of cancer.
Source: United Press International
Related Articles
- Cancer Predisposition From Gene Variant Shows Strong Gender Bias
- Scientists Predict Brain Cancer Survival With 7 Genes
- James L. Wittliff, Ph.D., FACB, to Present 'Predicting Breast Cancer Outcome With Gene Expression Signatures on the Ziplex(R) System' at the Association for Molecular Pathology Conference, October 30
- Cancer Researchers at Manhattan-Based St. Vincent's Comprehensive Cancer Center Discover Genes That Can Determine How Patients Respond to Pre-Leukemia Drug
- N.L. Health Board Missed Dozens of Breast Cancer Tests, Health Minister Says
- Liver Cancer is Good Gene Therapy Target
- St. Louis Cancer & Breast Institute Physician Says Hormone Replacement Therapy Does Indeed Create Breast Cancer Risk
- Cialis AIDS Prostate Cancer Sex Function
- Cancer and Embryonic Genes Found To Be Similar
- M.D. Anderson Cancer Center; E1A gene therapy represents a new approach for treating Ewing sarcoma
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds