All cells possess a cytoskeleton which allows them to move and maintain
their shape. However, scientists recently showed that a part of this
cytoskeleton called branched actin is also essential to cell proliferation, this
actin transmits information to cells about the space around them, environmental
chemical messages and therefore on whether they should proliferate. If the
necessary conditions are not met, these actin fibers are not synthesized, and
the cell does not divide – except in the case of cancerous cells, which can
override this control mechanism and proliferate where they should not. This
mechanism could nevertheless represent a therapeutic target to fight certain
types of cancer. Inhibiting the formation of branched actin, for example,
prevents the growth of a type of melanoma cells, against which no other
specific treatment exists today. This research, carried out by an international
team composed of scientists at the Laboratoire Bases moléculaires et régulation
de la biosynthèse protéique (CNRS/École polytechnique) appear in the April 10th
2019 edition of Cell Research.
Journal article:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41422-019-0160-9
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41422-019-0160-9
Source:
http://www.cnrs.fr/en/node/3722
http://www.cnrs.fr/en/node/3722
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