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Synthetic Kills Some Cancer Tumors
DALLAS, Nov. 12 (UPI) -- A synthetic compound has been shown to be effective
in treating human lung-cancer tumors grown in mice, researchers at a Dallas
medical center reported.
The findings,
appearing in the latest edition of Cancer Cell, suggested the compound
could be used in targeted therapies for lung and other cancers, researchers
at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas said in a news release.
The synthetic
compound mimics the action of a naturally occurring cellular protein called
Smac, which plays a major role in the normal self-destruction of a cell,
researchers said.
"We found that
certain kinds of lung-cancer cells were sensitive to this compound, which
sends a signal to cancer cells to self-destruct," said Dr. Xiaodong Wang,
professor of biochemistry at UT Southwestern and senior author of the study.
Wang's research
group tested 50 human non-small-cell lung-cancer cell lines and found that
22 percent of them were sensitive to the Smac protein. They also found
that the Smac mimic was effective against some types of breast cancer and
melanoma cells.
"The apparent
ability of a Smac mimetic, as a single agent, to induce cell death in nearly
one-quarter of lung-cancer cell lines tested was quite remarkable," Wang
said.
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