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Originally posted by sardion2000
There IS a cure.
Care to post a source on that? Also I'm sure you know that Cancer is not one disease so talking about a singular cure is rather inane.
Originally posted by JoJo the religious man
Thanks for posting those links soficrow,
...But hey the longer we have know about it the closer we are to understanding it and getting a cure right? Well I sure have had an enlightening day now.
Are Telomeres the Key to Aging and Cancer?
If telomerase makes cancer cells immortal, could it prevent normal cells from aging? Could we extend lifespan by preserving or restoring the length of telomeres with telomerase? If so, does that raise a risk the telomerase also will cause cancer?
Scientists are not yet sure. But they have been able to use telomerase to make human cells keep dividing far beyond their normal limit in laboratory experiments, and the cells do not become cancerous.
If telomerase could be used routinely to "immortalize" human cells, it would be theoretically possible to mass produce any human cell for transplantation, including insulin-producing cells to cure diabetes patients, muscle cells for muscular dystrophy, cartilage cells for people with certain kinds of arthritis, and skin cells for people with severe burns and wounds.
What are telomeres and telomerase?
To make sure that information is successfully passed from one generation to the next, each chromosome has a special protective cap called a telomere located at the end of it's "arms". Telomeres are controlled by the presence of the enzyme telomerase. (animation)
Telomere activity is controlled by two mechanisms: erosion and addition. Erosion, as mentioned, occurs each time a cell divides. Addition is determined by the activity of telomerase. (animation)
Telomerase is found in fetal tissues, adult germ cells, and also tumor cells. Telomerase activity is regulated during development and has a very low, almost undetectable activity in somatic (body) cells. Because these somatic cells do not regularly use telomerase, they age. The result of aging cells is an aging body. If telomerase is activated in a cell, the cell will continue to grow and divide. This "immortal cell" theory is important in two areas of research: aging and cancer.
***
Telomeres
Each eukaryotic chromosome consists of a single molecule of DNA associated with a variety of proteins. ...The DNA molecule of a typical chromosome contains
* a linear array of genes (encoding proteins and RNAs) interspersed with
* much noncoding DNA.
Included in the noncoding DNA are
* long stretches that make up the centromere and
* long stretches at the ends of the chromosome, the telomeres.
Telomeres are crucial to the life of the cell. They keep the ends of the various chromosomes in the cell from accidentally becoming attached to each other (e.g., by nonhomologous end-joining).
***
Telomeres and Cellular Aging
Telomeres are important so their steady shrinking with each mitosis might impose a finite life span on cells. This, in fact, is the case. Normal (non-cancerous) cells do not grow indefinitely when placed in culture.
Could shrinkage of telomeres be a clock that determines the longevity of a cell lineage?
Evidence:
Some cells are immortal.
* the cells of the germline (the germplasm);
* unicellular eukaryotes (like Paramecium);
* some cancer cells.
It turns out that these cells are able to maintain the length of their telomeres. They do so with the aid of an enzyme telomerase.
***
Telomerase
Telomerase is an enzyme that adds telomere repeat sequences to the 3' end of DNA strands. By lengthening this strand DNA polymerase is able to complete the synthesis of the "incomplete ends" of the opposite strand.
Telomerase is generally found only in
* the cells of the germline, including embryonic stem (ES) cells;
* unicellular eukaryotes like Tetrahymena thermophila;
* cancer cells.
Also see: Telomerase and Cancer; Telomerase and Transplanted Cells; Telomeres and Cloning
Originally posted by bsl4doc
One major hinderance to the idea that telomerase may halt a body's aging is that is does indeed cease apoptosis, but not mitosis.
And that would be why it's linked to cancer, right?
But it seems that the process already is being manipulated successfully in tissue engineering, for example.
Do you know the status of cloning cells for transplant? And the role of telomerase in cloned cells? Ie., is telomerase activation/deactivation manipulated?
Do you know what the alternatives are to Geron's technology? Could that be the holdup? Looking for alternatives, to avoid paying intellectual property and patent rights?
Originally posted by bsl4doc
Thus, if telomerase were suddenly activated in every cell in your body, or even just one cell subtype, you would experience a period of massive cellular increase (imagine, for example, the basal cells of your skin doubling in number due to telomerase not allowing the upper layer skin cells to die), followed by the massive death of cells due to a lack of immediate nutrition.
This process can most definitely by changed in tissue engineering. You can grow up telomerase+ cells in culture containing nutrient broth, but this is a far cry from introducing telomerase into a living system in which nutrient have to be transported TO the cells.
As far as Geron, it very well could be that they are trying to avoid having to pay for intellectual rights.
We report time-resolved fluorescence data for the anion of p-hydroxybenzylidene dimethylimidazolinone (p-HBDI), a model chromophore of the green fluorescence protein, in viscous glycerol-water mixtures over a range of temperatures, T. The markedly nonexponential decay of the excited electronic state is interpreted with the aid of an inhomogeneous model possessing a Gaussian coordinate-dependent sink term. A nonlinear least-squares fitting routine enables us to achieve quantitative fits by adjusting a single activation parameter, which is found to depend linearly on 1/T. We derive an analytic expression for the absolute quantum yield, which is compared with the integrated steady-state fluorescence spectra. The microscopic origins of the model are discussed in terms of two-dimensional dynamics, coupling the phenyl-ring rotation to a swinging mode that brings this flexible molecule to the proximity of a conical intersection on its multidimensional potential energy surface.
Deactivati on mechanism of the green fluorescent chromophore. J Phys Chem B Condens Matter Mater Surf Interfaces Biophys. 2006 Mar 9;110(9):4434-42. Gepshtein R, Huppert D, Agmon N. Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences, School of Chemistry, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel, and Department of Physical Chemistry and the Fritz Haber Research Center, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91904, Israel. PMID: 16509746
We report time-resolved fluorescence data for the anion of p-hydroxybenzylidene dimethylimidazolinone (p-HBDI), a model chromophore of the green fluorescence protein, in viscous glycerol-water mixtures over a range of temperatures, T. The markedly nonexponential decay of the excited electronic state is interpreted with the aid of an inhomogeneous model possessing a Gaussian coordinate-dependent sink term. A nonlinear least-squares fitting routine enables us to achieve quantitative fits by adjusting a single activation parameter, which is found to depend linearly on 1/T. We derive an analytic expression for the absolute quantum yield, which is compared with the integrated steady-state fluorescence spectra. The microscopic origins of the model are discussed in terms of two-dimensional dynamics, coupling the phenyl-ring rotation to a swinging mode that brings this flexible molecule to the proximity of a conical intersection on its multidimensional potential energy surface.
Originally posted by William One Sac
I read in the newspaper yesterday that researchers had found that eating sauerkraut regularly reduces your chances of getting many types of cancer.. The article said that it reduced the odds to more than a 70% reduction in people who get cancer masses. I will try and see if I can find the article to link to.
[edit on 2-16-2006 by William One Sac]