NATIONAL CANCER CONTROL PROGRAMME
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ISSN 1802-887X
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Study suggests new way to attack resistant tumours

UK scientists have shown that a particular group of chemotherapy drugs work by causing an unusual form of cell death in cancer cells, called necroptosis.


Until recently, scientists thought that most cancer cell death caused by treatment happened through a process called apoptosis. This process is often blocked in cancer cells - leading them to resist treatment and grow and spread.

Now, scientists at the Breakthrough Breast Cancer Research Centre at the Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) have shown that some cancer treatments use necroptosis to kill cancer cells that are resistant to the usual process of cell death.

Read the whole article at Cancer Research UK

Reference

  1. Tenev, T., Bianchi, K., Darding, M., Broemer, M., Langlais, C., Wallberg, F., Zachariou, A., Lopez, J., MacFarlane, M., Cain, K., & Meier, P. (2011). The Ripoptosome, a Signaling Platform that Assembles in Response to Genotoxic Stress and Loss of IAPs Molecular Cell DOI: 10.1016/j.molcel.2011.06.006

Keywords: cell death, necroptosis, chemotherapy

14. 7. 2011 Cancer Research UK


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