Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Indian-origin scientist turns cancer cells into harmless cells

- Indo-Asian News Service letters@hindustant­imes.com

achievemen­t,” said a researcher of the Tippie College of Business, University of Iowa. IANS WASHINGTON: An Indian-origin researcher at the Stanford University in the US has found a method that can cause dangerous leukemia cells to mature into harmless immune cells known as macrophage­s.

Assistant professor of medicine Ravi Majeti made the key observatio­n after collecting leukemia cells from a patient and trying to keep the cells alive in a culture plate. “We were throwing everything at them to help them survive,” said Majeti in a paper that appeared in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

B-cell leukemia cells are in many ways progenitor cells that are forced to stay in an immature state. During the study, Majeti and post-doctoral scholar Scott McClellan found that some of the cancer cells in culture were changing shape and size into what looked like macrophage­s.

The team confirmed that methods shown to have altered the fate of the mouse progenitor cells years ago could be used to transform these human cancer cells into macrophage­s which can engulf and digest cancer cells and pathogens.

B-cell acute lymphoblas­tic leukemia with a mutation called the Philadelph­ia chromosome is a particular­ly aggressive cancer with poor outcomes. “So finding potential treatments is particular­ly exciting,” Majeti added. The researcher­s’ next steps would be to see if they can find a drug that will prompt the same reaction and that could serve as the basis for a therapy for the leukemia.

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