Stem cell divisions in tissues indicate cancer risk

Stem cell divisions in tissues indicate cancer risk

Researchers have attributed the cause of cancer to two factors: heredity and lifestyle. However, environmental risk factors can alter the cancer rates among adult tissues contribute to the development of cancer. Now scientists at Johns Hopkins University have identified a third factor that helps explain why the chances of developing some kinds of cancer such as lung cancer are higher than others such as brain cancer. Cristian Tomasetti, a mathematician who studies oncology, and Bert Vogelstein, a cancer geneticist studied the number of stem cells and their rates of division in 31 different tissues. They discovered that about 65% of the variation in cancer risk among tissue types depends on the number of stem cell divisions a tissue undergoes within its lifetime. The greater the cumulative number of stem cell divisions, the higher the cancer rate in that tissue. It was observed that colorectal and basal cell tissue had the highest number of cell divisions, while bone tissue of the pelvis, head, and arms underwent the least divisions, which affected the likelihood of these tissues developing cancer.

Read more in The Scientist.

期待学术生涯高歌猛进,发表过程一帆风顺?

来加入我们活力洋溢的在线社区吧。免费注册,无限阅览。

社交账号一键登入

已有54300名科研人员在此注册。

觉得有用?

如果是的话,和你的同事分享吧