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Meet the supermouse bred by genetic scientists that CAN'T get cancer
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28 November 2007
A protein produced by the creatures may hold the key to a future therapy.
It attacks tumour cells, but does not harm healthy tissue in the body.
Scientists hope the gene will one day provide a cancer treatment without painful side effects
Scientists hope it can one day be adapted for use in humans - saving them the pain, nausea and hair loss usually associated with cancer treatments.
The breakthrough hinges on a mouse gene called Par-4, which produces the protein. U.S. researchers genetically engineered a group of mice to have higher levels of the protein than normal.
These creatures were found to be immune to many forms of the disease, such as cancer of the liver and prostate, the journal Cancer Research reports.
Tests suggest the protein could also beat off breast, pancreatic and head and neck cancers.
Crucially, the animals did not suffer any visible side-effects, the U.S. scientists said.
In Britain, more than 280,000 of us are diagnosed with cancer each year - and 150,000 die.
Kentucky University researcher Dr Vivek Rangnekar said: "When a cancer patient goes into a clinic, they undergo chemotherapy or radiation and there are potential side- effects associated with those treatments.
"We got interested in looking for a molecule which will kill cancer cells and not kill normal cells, but also would not be toxic with regard to the entire organism.
"We are thinking this as a holistic approach that would not only get rid of the tumour, but also not harm the organism as a whole."
In time, it may be possible to adapt the method to treat people, with the gene, or a similar gene, being introduced into the body through bone marrow transplants.
But such a treatment is at least ten years away.
Dr Rangnekar, whose work is inspired by a relative's fight against cancer, said: "I look at the research from the standpoint of how it can be developed to benefit the cancer patient and that's what really keeps us focused.
"If you look at the pain that cancer patients go through, not just from the disease, but also from the treatment - it's excruciating.
"If you can not only treat the cancer but also not harm the patient, that's a major breakthrough.
"That's what's happening with these animals and I think that's wonderful."
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in Britain, affecting more than 44,000 women a year and claiming more than 1,000 lives a month.
Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in British men, with nearly 32,000 new cases of the disease each year - and more than 10,000 deaths.
Liver cancer claims 2,800 lives a year, while cancers of the head and neck, including mouth, nose, throat and eye tumours, affect more than 7,000 Britons each year and kill 2,500.
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