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Blocking a Protein Breaks the Backbone of Triple-Negative Breast Cancers

by Kathy Jones on Mar 20 2012 8:31 PM

Blocking a Protein Breaks the Backbone of Triple-Negative Breast Cancers
A new study says that breast tumors can regress when an abundant growth-promoting protein is blocked.
The study is published on March 19th in the Journal of Experimental Medicine.

Triple-negative breast tumors lack all of the known growth receptors that serve as treatment targets in other types of breast cancer, making this the most clinically challenging subtype of the disease. Patients with these tumors tend to relapse earlier and have shorter disease-free survival.

Andrei Goga and colleagues now show that triple-negative breast tumors express elevated levels of the growth-driving protein called MYC. MYC activity was required for the growth of these aggressive tumors, and blocking a MYC-cooperating protein, CDK, caused triple-negative tumors to shrink in mice.

Together, these results identify a potential new target for triple-negative tumor treatment.



Source-Eurekalert


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