homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Beating cancer by making it forget what it is [TED VIDEO]

Dr. Jay Bradner, a physician and chemical biologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, makes beating cancer sound easy – darn easy! Through the wonderful information that epigenetics science has delivered in the past decade, he believes cancer can be defeated simply by re-writing its genetic information such that it forgets that it’s a cancer, and […]

Tibi Puiu
August 9, 2012 @ 1:26 pm

share Share

DANA SMITH

(c) DANA SMITH

Dr. Jay Bradner, a physician and chemical biologist at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, makes beating cancer sound easy – darn easy! Through the wonderful information that epigenetics science has delivered in the past decade, he believes cancer can be defeated simply by re-writing its genetic information such that it forgets that it’s a cancer, and starts behaving like a regular cell.

“With all the things cancer is trying to do to kill our patient, how does it remember it is cancer?” asks Bradner.

Researchers in Bradner’s lab have developed a compound that  manipulates epigenetic instructions, and he has sent it out to hundreds of collaborators worldwide. “That’s not common in practice,” says Bradner, “but from first principles, it’s the right thing to do.”

Almost exclusively, research for a prototype drug is kept top-secret by labs, keeping its structure and research findings completely oblivious to the rest of the world. Bradner took an alternate route and simply made it freely accessible from the get to, first by reporting his findings in a paper, then by sending samples to just about any lab interest (you too can ask the good doctor for a sample – you just need to e-mail). Results poured in just after a few months, as possible treatments for other afflictions, besides the rare form of cancer Bradner’s research targeted, such as leukemia, while another lab showed that the compound could be used to poise fat cells to forget they’re fat cells as well. Yes, you could basically eat all you want without gaining weight or fatty tissue.

This research is phenomenal, right on the cutting edge of science, and while Bradner and his team still have quite a while before the first clinical trial is released, their progress is worth noting and, especially, following. For more scientific info and details on results, please check this article on Nature. For an easy to digest pill of insight on the subject at hand, book 10 minutes of your day and watch this incredible TED speech at Boston by Bradner himself.

share Share

This New Coating Repels Oil Like Teflon Without the Nasty PFAs

An ultra-thin coating mimics Teflon’s performance—minus most of its toxicity.

People in Thailand were chewing psychoactive nuts 4,000 years ago. It's in their teeth

The teeth Chico, they never lie.

Potatoes were created by a plant "love affair" between tomatoes and a wild cousin

It was one happy natural accident.

We Might Be Ingesting Thousands of Lung-Penetrating Microplastics Daily in Our Homes and Cars — 100x More Than Previously Estimated

Microscopic plastic particles are everywhere and there's more than we thought.

This Scientist Stepped Thousands of Times on Deadly Snakes So You Don't Have To. What He Found Could Save Lives

This scientist is built different.

Scientists Say Junk Food Might Be as Addictive as Drugs

This is especially hurtful for kids.

Stuttering Has Deep Genetic Roots and May Affect Your Ability to Clap to a Beat

A massive genetic study found that stuttering is not just about nurture and may link to processing rhythm itself.

A New AI Can Spot You by How Your Body Bends a Wi-Fi Signal

You don’t need a phone or camera to be tracked anymore: just wi-fi.

Tooth nerves aren't just for pain. They also protect your teeth

We should be more thankful for what's in our mouths.

Temporary Tattoo Turns Red If Your Drink Has Been Spiked

This skin-worn patch can detect GHB in drinks in under one second