A Potential Anti-cancer Agent Found in Ocean Creatures
Pateamine A (PatA), a natural product first isolated from marine sponges, has attracted considerable attention as a potential anti-cancer agent, and now a new activity has been found for it, which may reveal yet another anti-cancer mechanism. That's the assessment of Daniel Romo, a Texas A&M chemistry professor, and his colleagues at Johns Hopkins University who are pioneers in research involving this novel marine natural product. Messenger RNA (mRNA), as its name indicates, copies messages from genes on DNA and uses these messages to produce proteins, and the human body functions well only with the right types and amount of proteins. So, what happens when mRNA gets damaged? Will the wrong proteins produced by the wrong messages carried by mRNA damage a persons body? Credit: Texas A&MRelated Videos
- Unprecedented Opportunity for DNA Researchers
- New Cancer Treatment Uses Cancer-resistant Blood
- Exercise May Protect You from Skin Cancer
- Zapping Cancer Cells with Electrical Energy
- Surprising Relationship Between Sunlight, Vitamin D, and Cancer
- New Insights into Skin Cancer
- Finding Lung Cancer In Your DNA
- New Cancer-Fighting Drug
- Scientists Create New Drug That Attacks Cancer Tumors Safely
- A Potential Anti-cancer Agent Found in Ocean Creatures
Word of the Day
Word of the Day
provided by The Free Dictionary
Today in History
This Day in History
provided by The Free Dictionary
Quiz Me
How fast do the Leonid meteorites travel when entering the atmosphere?
or View Results










RSS Feeds