Edition: International
Sunday 20 July, 2025
BREAKING NEWS

Justice Yashwant Varma Moves SC Against In-house Panel report

  • News
    • Kochi
    • Trivandrum
    • Kozhikode
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Health
  • Entertainment
    • E24hrs
    • Cinema
    • Directors
    • Actors
  • Education
    • Career
  • Automobile
  • Personalities
    • Political Leaders
  • Religion
    • Christian
      • Catholic
      • Latin Catholic
      • Syro Malabar
    • Hindu
    • Islam
  • Environment
  • More
    • Food
    • Wellness
    • Lifestyle
    • Beauty & Fashion
    • Fitness
    • Mental Health
    • Yoga
    • Video
  • മലയാളം
BREAKING NEWS
100Days: Thirike, Neestream and Gopi Make their Way into the India Book of Records
Tata Neu HDFC Bank Credit Card Offers Spotify Premium as a Perk For Its Cardholders
AI Meets Innovation: Samsung Launches its Future-Forward
Iraq: Death Toll Rises to 61 in Tragic Hypermarket Fire
15-Year-Old Hindu Girl Abducted, Another Forcibly Converted in Pakistan
Truth will Prevail: Congress Defends Robert Vadra after ED Chargesheet in Land Deal Case
    • News
      • Kochi
      • Trivandrum
      • Kozhikode
    • Sports
    • Business
    • Health
    • Entertainment
      • E24hrs
      • Cinema
      • Directors
      • Actors
    • Education
      • Career
    • Automobile
    • Personalities
      • Political Leaders
    • Religion
      • Christian
        • Catholic
        • Latin Catholic
        • Syro Malabar
      • Hindu
      • Islam
    • Environment
    • More
      • Food
      • Wellness
      • Lifestyle
      • Beauty & Fashion
      • Fitness
      • Mental Health
      • Yoga
      • Video
    • മലയാളം
  • Health
  • Understanding the Link Between Cancer, Ageing

    By NE Reporter on July 7, 2018

    WASHINGTON:
    A recent study has found a new link between cancer and ageing.
    The researchers at the Hollings Cancer Center at the Medical University of South Carolina found that human lung cancer cells resist dying by controlling parts of the ageing process.
    The discovery could help us better understand ageing and eventually could lead to new treatments for cancer.
    Besim Ogretmen’s team found that cancer cells have specific ways to resist dying the way normal cells do. They do so by protecting the tips of their chromosomes, which hold our DNA, from age-related damage.
    Ogretmen studies how cancer cells are different than normal cells to understand how cancer grows and spreads in the body. His work is part of a USD 8.9 million program project grant to research how alterations of lipid metabolism affect cancer therapy.
    The grant is helping fund a clinical trial of an anticancer medicine to inhibit cellular signalling that helps cancer cells survive. The drug was found to be useful against cancer in the research reported in the group’s new paper.
    As normal cells get older, the tips of their chromosomes, called telomeres, can start to break down, which is a signal for the cell to die. This seems to be part of the ageing process in normal cells. However, cancer cells have developed a way to prevent their telomeres from falling apart, which helps them to live much longer than normal cells. The long life of cancer cells is part of what allows them to grow and spread throughout the body.
    In their new paper, Ogretmen’s research group discovered a specific way that cancer cells escape death in response to telomere damage. Scientists have known that various types of cancer cells have low levels of a protein called p16. Ogretmen’s group found that, when telomeres become damaged by age or in response to chemotherapy, p16 is a type of cellular decision-maker, where it helps cells decide to grow older or to simply die.
    “Telomeres are like a biological clock for our cells,” said Ogretmen. “In cancer, this biological clock is broken.”
    The researchers found that p16 became most important to cells when their telomeres began to break down. When that happened, p16 rushed into action and pushed cells toward further ageing by inhibiting cell death.
    To determine the clinical impact of these data, the researchers used a chemical enzyme inhibitor to cause telomere damage in several types of cancer cells, including lung cancer cells. The inhibitor, ABC294640, acts in a way that prevents cancer cells from protecting their telomeres, by inhibiting an enzyme called sphingosine kinase 2. This inhibition was shown to force telomeres to break down.
    As a result of this enzyme inhibition, telomeres were damaged, resulting in cancer cell death when p16 levels were low or absent. However, cancer cells with high levels of p16 were able to escape death, and stayed biologically inactive, which was a sign of ageing.
    “We’re excited that there is at least one mechanism that can help us understand how ageing is associated with a higher risk of cancer,” said Ogretmen. “And then, can we prevent or better treat the ageing-related cancers by controlling protective effects of p16 for cancer cell death?”
    The study appears in the Journal of Biological Chemistry. (ANI)

    Iscea

    NE Reporter

    Ageinganticancer medicinecancerlipid metabolismlung cancer

    more recommended stories

    • Ambuja Cements and Adani Foundation Bring Healthcare Closer to Rural Communities

      SHUNYAPAHED (TELANGANA):Ambuja Cements, the cement and.

    • Recurrent Cardiac Arrests: Advanced Procedure Gives New Lease of Life to 47-year-old Patient

      THIRUVANANTHAPURAM:A 47-year-old man’s life was saved.

    • Naga Sadhu’s Recognized in France for Health Initiative Conducted at Maha Kumbh 2025

      MUMBAI:The revered Naga Sadhus have brought.

    • Fatty Liver No Longer Just a Lifestyle Disease: Experts Raise Alarm

      KOCHI:In a joint initiative by Amrita.

    • Complex Hernia Case Treated Successfully with Minimally Invasive Surgery

      KOCHI:A 52-year-old male patient, who had.

    • DKMS Foundation India Honours Stem Cell Donors

      KOCHI:Ahead of World Blood Cancer Day,.

    • Dangerously Low Oxygen Levels Normalized Through Complex Surgery

      THIRUVANANTHAPURAM:A complex surgery was successfully performed.

    • KSUM-backed Startup VitalView AI Flagged Chances of Nipah Incidence in Kerala

      KOCHI:Public health intelligence startup VitalView AI,.

    • Asthma Remains Underdiagnosed in 7 out of 10 Severe Cases

      KOZHIKODE:Marked by the GINA (the Global.

    • Aster Guardians Global Nursing Award Unveils Top 10 Finalists for 2025

      KOCHI:The Aster Guardians Global Nursing Award.

    Live Updates

    • Tata Neu HDFC Bank Credit Card Offers Spotify Premium as a Perk For Its Cardholders
    • AI Meets Innovation: Samsung Launches its Future-Forward
    • Iraq: Death Toll Rises to 61 in Tragic Hypermarket Fire
    • 15-Year-Old Hindu Girl Abducted, Another Forcibly Converted in Pakistan
    • Truth will Prevail: Congress Defends Robert Vadra after ED Chargesheet in Land Deal Case

    NewsExperts.in

    • മലയാളം
    • മലയാളം

    What’s New ?

    • Tata Neu HDFC Bank Credit Card Offers Spotify Premium as a Perk For Its Cardholders
    • AI Meets Innovation: Samsung Launches its Future-Forward
    • Iraq: Death Toll Rises to 61 in Tragic Hypermarket Fire
    • 15-Year-Old Hindu Girl Abducted, Another Forcibly Converted in Pakistan
    • Truth will Prevail: Congress Defends Robert Vadra after ED Chargesheet in Land Deal Case

    Newsexperts.in - powered by Klickevents Infosolutions (P) LTD