PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Heterogeneous ER+ breast cancer models allow more accurate drug testing

Human-derived breast cancer xenografts allow revolution in individualized cancer care

2012-08-06
(Press-News.org) Cell cultures are homogeneous. Human tumors are not. A University of Colorado Cancer Center study recently published in the journal Breast Cancer Research and Treatment reports the development of human-derived estrogen-positive (ER+) breast cancer models that retain their heterogeneity, allowing researchers to more accurately test drugs for this disease.

"Breast cancer is never black or white. These models will allow us to tease apart the shades of grey," says Peter Kabos, MD, investigator at the CU Cancer Center, assistant professor at the CU School of Medicine, and the study's lead author.

What he means is that not all cells in an ER+ breast cancer are ER+. Instead, in a human tumor there may be pockets of cells that depend on estrogen for survival and so are susceptible to anti-estrogen therapies, alongside cancer cells that depend on other mechanisms for their growth. Testing a drug in a homogenous ER+ cell culture may predict little about how the drug performs in a heterogeneous ER+ breast cancer tumor.

This heterogeneity leads to breast cancer's most deadly characteristic: the ability to evolve past anti-estrogen drugs. In this theory, doctors may be able to kill ER+ cells with anti-estrogens, but this does nothing to slow the growth of other types of breast cancer cells, which soon become the tumor's dominant type. These ER- cells tend to be much more difficult to kill.

"These new heterogeneous breast cancer models allow two things," says Carol Sartorius, PhD, investigator at the CU Cancer Center, associate professor at the CU School of Medicine, and the paper's senior author. "First, we can more accurately test drugs on these models. And second, instead of looking for features that are common to all breast cancers, maintaining a tumor's heterogeneity allows us to ask what's unique to that tumor – not what makes all breast cancers the same, but what makes some breast cancers different than others. As we've seen in the modern push toward personalized cancer care, these unique features may allow us to more effectively target an individual's tumor."

In the recent study, human breast tumor samples derived after surgery were transplanted into animal models, after which the tumor samples maintained their heterogeneity, as in the original tumors.

"The next treatment will come from better understanding of the ratios of ER+ and ER- cells present in individual tumors and deciphering their hierarchy," Kabos says.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Disney researchers add sense of touch to augmented reality applications

2012-08-06
PITTSBURGH – Technology developed by Disney Research, Pittsburgh, makes it possible to change the feel of real-world surfaces and objects, including touch-screens, walls, furniture, wooden or plastic objects, without requiring users to wear special gloves or use force-feedback devices. Surfaces are not altered with actuators and require little if any instrumentation. Instead, Disney researchers employ a newly discovered physical phenomenon called reverse electrovibration to create the illusion of changing textures as the user's fingers sweep across a surface. A weak electrical ...

Touch your philodendron and control your computer

2012-08-06
PITTSBURGH – A yucca plant might make your office desk look nice, but with a new technology developed at Disney Research, Pittsburgh, that little shrub could possibly control your computer. And the jade plant nearby? Put your hand close to it and your iPod could start playing your favorite tunes. Any houseplant — real or artificial — could control a computer or any digital device with this technology, called Botanicus Interactus. Once a single wire is placed anywhere in the plant's soil, the technology can detect if and where a plant is touched, or even if someone gets ...

Carnegie Mellon and Disney Research develop new model for animated faces and bodies

2012-08-06
PITTSBURGH—Computer graphic artists who produce computer-animated movies and games spend much time creating subtle movements such as expressions on faces, gesticulations on bodies and the draping of clothes. A new way of modeling these dynamic objects, developed by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University, Disney Research, Pittsburgh, and the LUMS School of Science and Engineering in Pakistan, could greatly simplify this editing process. Graphics software usually represents dynamic objects, such as an expressive face, as a sequence of shapes, with each shape composed ...

Disney Research demonstrates markerless motion capture

2012-08-06
PITTSBURGH -- Conventional motion capture for film and game production involves multiple cameras and actors festooned with markers. A new technique developed by Disney Research, Pittsburgh, has demonstrated how three-dimensional motion capture can be accomplished with a single camera and without aid of markers. The technique, developed in collaboration with Brown University, not only captures the 3D poses of actors, as is done with traditional motion capture systems, but derives "biped controllers" — programs that incorporate the underlying physics of the motion. Bipedal ...

Lying less linked to better health, new research finds

2012-08-06
ORLANDO, Fla. -- Telling the truth when tempted to lie can significantly improve a person's mental and physical health, according to a "Science of Honesty" study presented at the American Psychological Association's 120th Annual Convention. "Recent evidence indicates that Americans average about 11 lies per week. We wanted to find out if living more honestly can actually cause better health," said lead author Anita E. Kelly, PhD, professor of psychology at the University of Notre Dame. "We found that the participants could purposefully and dramatically reduce their everyday ...

Cyberbullying less frequent than traditional bullying, according to international studies

2012-08-06
ORLANDO, Fla. – Traditional in-person bullying is far more common than cyberbullying among today's youth and should be the primary focus of prevention programs, according to research findings presented at the American Psychological Association's 120th Annual Convention. "Claims by the media and researchers that cyberbullying has increased dramatically and is now the big school bullying problem are largely exaggerated," said psychologist Dan Olweus, PhD, of the University of Bergen, Norway. "There is very little scientific support to show that cyberbullying has increased ...

Race may play significant role in presidential election, survey finds

2012-08-06
ORLANDO, Fla. -- Voters' racial attitudes, both conscious and unconscious, may be a significant factor in this year's U.S. presidential election, particularly since whites tend to prefer people of their own race, according to research presented at the 120th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association. "People may not even be aware that they have certain racial attitudes and that could be why, even with an African-American president in the White House for nearly four years, race continues to play a role in electoral politics," Anthony G. Greenwald, PhD, ...

Understanding the biological and ecological implications of safe nanotechnology

Understanding the biological and ecological implications of safe nanotechnology
2012-08-06
Nanoscale science and technology has seen exciting advances recently in drug delivery, electronics, energy and environmental applications. According to international scientific conventions, nanomaterials are those whose at least one dimension is less than or equal to 10-9 m. At the same time, there is a great possibility for nanomaterials to enter ecosystems at the points of use or disposal, which could lead to negative environmental implications. Our recent paper, "Dendrimer-fullerenol soft-condensed nanoassembly" published in The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, showed ...

Growing up grateful gives teens multiple mental health benefits, new research shows

2012-08-06
ORLANDO, Fla. -- Grateful teens are more likely than their less grateful peers to be happy, less likely to abuse drugs and alcohol and less likely to have behavior problems at school, according to research presented at the American Psychological Association's 120th Annual Convention. "Gratitude played an important role in many areas of positive mental health of the teens in our study," said lead author Giacomo Bono, PhD, psychology professor at California State University. "Increases in gratitude over a four-year period were significantly related to improvements in life ...

JCI early table of contents for Aug. 6, 2012

2012-08-06
ONCOLOGY Understanding colon cancer metastasis and invasion | Back to top Chemokines are signals in the body that act as beacons, calling out to migrating cells, such as white blood cells, guiding them to where they are needed. One chemokine in particular, Chemokine 25 (CCL25), binds to Chemokine Receptor 9 (CCR9), forming a signaling pathway that is important in the small intestine and colon, where it regulates immune response and decreases cell death. Drs. Steven Lipkin, Xiling Shen, and colleagues at Cornell University have discovered that the CCL25-CCR9 pathway also ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

NCCN Cancer Center study demonstrates usability of Health Equity Report Card (HERC) tool for driving fair access to care

SwRI adds new chamber for spacecraft-related EMC, EMI testing

Molecular profiling using next-generation sequencing of sufficient endobronchial ultrasound-guided transbronchial needle aspiration and liquid biopsy samples in patients with advanced lung cancer

Case Western Reserve University awarded $2.6 million to study impact of high blood-pressure medications on chronic kidney disease patients

Dramatic drop in marijuana use among U.S. youth over a decade: (2011 to 2021)

Exploring unlabeled data for enhanced semi-supervised MRI segmentation

Inhaled reliever therapies for asthma

Thin skin significantly blunts injury from puncture, study finds

A landscape of consciousness

Towards implementing neural networks on edge IoT devices

Co-culture system for sustainable cultured meat production

Breakthrough in 3D object scanning: Boosting clarity and depth perception for complex structures

Building safer cities with AI: Machine learning model enhances urban resilience against liquefaction

Novel self-cleaning electrode developed for alkaline-earth metal peroxide synthesis

New report demands greater understanding of the impact of change on academia

Discovery of key mechanism in Huntington’s Disease could pave the way for early detection and treatment

Humans and AI: Do they work better together or alone?

Childhood attention issues and genetic factors may predict psychosis risk

Amsterdam UMC study proves impact of rapid first shock after cardiac arrest

Children’s BMI can affect their future lung function

Don't worry. Study shows you're likely a more creative writer than ChatGPT. For now

Heart failure mortality declining in Sweden

Understanding how mutations affect diseases

Quality control in artificial photosynthesis: validating natural antenna mimicry

When science speaks in extremes

Will the ocean suffer an epidemic?

A single thin film perfectly absorbs all electromagnetic waves!

Teens who made history with Pythagoras’ theorem discovery publish their first academic paper with new proofs

More social species live longer, Oxford study finds

Magicians don’t mind sharing the secrets behind tricks – if they are their own

[Press-News.org] Heterogeneous ER+ breast cancer models allow more accurate drug testing
Human-derived breast cancer xenografts allow revolution in individualized cancer care