Home Up Aging News Seniors Commentary California Report Caregiving_News.htm Community/Workplace Election 2012 'Smart Bombing' Diseases Fitness,Health Grandparents HealthCare Policy Hispanic Seniors Medicare News Prescription Drug News Resources, Links Rural Seniors Resources, links to seniors agencies, groups Safety & Security Seniors' Entertainment Seniors' Finances Seniors Relationships Social Security News The Virtual Family Travel News Veterans Tribute Privacy Statement Join Our Mailing List Aging Resources Store TSN Video News Rx for American Health New Page 12

 Home
Up
Angioplasty:Never Too Old
Attacking Stem Cells
Aspiirn Fights Colon Cancer
Benchmarks Too Low
Blacks' Survival Lower
Campaign to Raise Awareness
Chemotherapy Reaction
Colon Cancer Awareness
Colon Cancer, Drug Costs
Colon Cancer Fighter
Colon Cancer Myths
Colon Cancer Red Flags
Colonoscopies Save Lives
Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month
Colon Screening Saves Lives
Detecting Lynch Syndrome
Elderly Virtual Screening
Elderly with Colon Cancer
High Blood Sugar Link
Improved Survival Rates
Kills Precancerous Polyps
Less Painful Colonoscopy
Lowering Death Risk
Master Switches
Metastatic Drug Tests
Molecular Subtype Risk
More Screenings Recommended
Obama Virtual Colonoscopy
Obesity, Colon Cancer
Obesity Colon Cancer Link
Predicting Survival
Promising New Medicines
Radiation before Surgery
Reducing African-American Risk
Reducing Risk
Resistant Starch Benefit
Rural Screenings
Screening Among Elderly
Screening Beats Colon Cancer
Screening Disparities Remain
Screening Disparities Continue
Screening Influences
Screening Rates Too Low
Southern States' Mortality
Super Colon Tour
Targeted Cancer Drugs
Therapy Lowers Risk
Too Few Colon Screenings
Understanding Polyps
Unhelpful Treatments
Vitamin Lack, Gene Links
Virtual Benefit
Virtual Colonoscopies Triple
Weight, Mortality Link
Women's Colonoscopy Prep
Virtual Colonoscopy for Seniors
Virtual Colonoscopy Coverage
Virtual Scanning Bill Support
Virus Protection

 

 

Home
Activity, Plant-Based Diet
Acupuncture Eases Pain
Alcohol, Pancreas Cancer
Adequate Rest Needed
Anderson Master Plan
Aspirin Deters Cancers
At-Home Exercise Programs
Bladder Cancer News
Body Image Importance
Bone Marrow Recipient
Boomers' Luekemia, Lymphoma
Brain Cancer News
Breast Cancer News
Bone Marrow Donor
Cancer Achilles' Heel
Cancer Awareness Month
Cancer Caregiver Support
Cancer Cells, Genes
Cancer Coss to Double
Cancer Death Rate
Cancer Drs. Revolt
Cancer-Free Aging
Cancer in Elderly
Cancer News Headlines
Cancer Statistics Report
Cancer Patients Experience
Cancer Link
Cancer Prevention
Cancer Report
Cancer Risk
Cancer Society Campaign
Cancer Spread
Cancer Survivor's Edge
Cancer Survivor Needs
Cervical Spine Disease
Childhood Cancer
Elderly Chronic Disease
Cardio-Oncology Program
Colon Cancer Newes
Continuing Cancer Risk
Costs Prevent Treatments
Deadly Ovarian Cancer
Detriment to Chemo Effectiveness
Diet Impact Camcer.Tumors
DNA Sequence Hones In
Drinking, Pancreatic Cancer
Esophageal Cancer Risk
Esophageal Cancer Fighter
Enzyme Role in Cancer
Exercise Benefit
Food and Oral Drugs
Gastric Cancer Risk
Genetic Knowlege Important
Health Care Reform Impact
How & Why of Cancer Cells
Infections Cause Cancer
Legal Needs Unmet
Life Guide Boosts Survival
Less Cancerous Cancer
Leukema Risk Markers
Liver Cancer News
Long-Term Declines
Lower Cancer Risk
Lung Cancer News
Malignant Hyperthermia
Marrow Transplant Risk Cut
Measuring Cancer Spread
Minority Cancer Awareness
More Older Survivors
Music Reduces Anxiety
New Clinical Trials
New, Safer Treatment
Older Patients' Challenges
Online Cancer Support
Ovarian Cancer Therapy
Palliative Care Intervention
Pancreatic Cancer, Aspirin
Pap Test Detection
Pancreatic Cancer Progression
Pancreatic Cancer Vaccine
Patient Blogs About Battle
Patients Missing Shots
Planning for 2020
Preventinng Cancer
Procedure Improves Health
Prevention Strategy Emphasis
Prostate Cancer News
Pulmonary Cancer Link
Quality Care Difficult
Quality of Life Therapy
Reduce Cancer Risk
Self-Image Recovery Role
Skin Cancer News
Skin Conditions Hamper Treatment
Small Liquid Sensor
Stand up to Cancer Project
Star-Studded Event
Starving Kidney Cancer Cells
Stomach Cancer Link
Supplement Role Questioned
Surgery Death Risk
Survivor Cardiiovascular Risk
Targeted Drugs Danger
Telephone Care Program
Throat Cancer Indicator
Tumor with a Twist
U.S. Cancer Deaths Down
Virus Detects Cancer Early
Why Cancer Increases
Zappping Tumors
100-year-old Survivor

 

Google

 

 

Web

TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com

Share with friends, community with Add This! service above!
 

AddThis Feed Button   Now, keep up to date with daily feeds of newly posted stories about America's Seniors...click on the box to the left 
 
Be the first of your friends to like this.

Breakthrough Discovery unveils Master Switches in Colon Cancer

 

Newswise, May 3, 2012— A team of researchers at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine has identified a new mechanism by which colon cancer develops.

By focusing on segments of DNA located between genes, or so-called “junk DNA,” the team has discovered a set of master switches, i.e., gene enhancer elements, that turn “on and off” key genes whose altered expression is defining for colon cancers. They have coined the term Variant Enhancer Loci or “VELs,” to describe these master switches.

Importantly, VELs are not mutations in the actual DNA sequence, but rather are changes in proteins that bind to DNA, a type of alteration known as “epigenetic” or “epimutations.” This is a critical finding because such epimutations are potentially reversible.

Over the course of three years, the team mapped the locations of hundreds of thousands of gene enhancer elements in DNA from normal and cancerous colon tissues, pinpointing key target VELs that differed between the two types.

“What is particularly interesting is that VELs define a ‘molecular signature’ of colon cancer. Meaning, they are consistently found across multiple independent colon tumor samples, despite the fact that the tumors arose in different individuals and are at different stages of the disease,” says Peter Scacheri, PhD, senior author of the study and assistant professor, Genetics and Genome Sciences, School of Medicine, and member, Case Comprehensive Cancer Center at Case Western Reserve University.

“The set of common VELs govern a distinct set of genes that go awry in colon cancer.”

 
 

“The VELs signature is notable because it cuts through the complexity of the many genes that are changed in colon cancer, to identify genes that are direct targets of alterations on chromosomes”, says Sanford Markowitz, MD, PhD, Ingalls Professor of Cancer Genetics in the Division of Hematology-Oncology at the School of Medicine, member, Case Comprehensive Cancer Center, and oncologist at University Hospitals Seidman Cancer Center, whose team collaborated on the study.

“The key next step will be to determine whether we can use VELs for ‘personalized medicine,’ to molecularly define distinct groups of colon cancers that differ in their clinical behavior, and to enable selection of specific drugs that will best treat a given colon tumor.”

In addition to finding that VELs are a “signature” of colon cancer, the team showed that genetic variants which predispose individuals to colon cancer are located within VELs. This suggests that individual differences within VELs may play significant roles in determining different individuals’ susceptibility to colon cancer.

“Epigenetics has transformed the way we think about genomes. The genetic code isn’t just a series of As, Ts, Gs, and Cs strung together. Epigenetic ‘marks’ on DNA tell genes when, where, and how much to turn on or off to keep cells healthy,” says Batool Akhtar-Zaidi, PhD candidate in Dr. Scacheri’s lab and lead author of the study.

“When this epigenetic machinery is disrupted, as we see with VEL events, this can tip the balance to cancer.”

Co-authors on the study, “Epigenomic enhancer profiling defines a signature of colon cancer” published advanced online in Science Express, include Olivia Corradin, Alina Saiakhova, Cynthia F. Bartels, Dheepa Balasubramanian, Lois Myeroff, James Lutterbaugh, Paul J. Tesar, Thomas Laframboise, Joseph Willis at Case Western Reserve School of Medicine; Awad Jarrar, Matthew F. Kalady at Cleveland Clinic; and Richard Cowper-Sal lari, Jason H. Moore, Mathieu Lupien at Dartmouth Medical School.

This research was supported by the National Cancer Institute, as well as the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Download our new Android Apps for RxforAmericanHealth.blog or TodaysSeniorsNetwork.  Load them directly onto your mobile device by opening your device, opening your browser and entering either todaysseniorsnetwork or rxforamerican's health in the search box, then, when the app icon appears,  click download, then after download, click install. Or, click here to install both apps directly from the web to your phone.

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
    

Copyright 2000-2013 TodaysSeniorsNetwork

 

Contact Us