Arab Times

Light used to battle cancer

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BOSTON, April 27, (RTRS): In an intriguing approach to the fight against cancer, researcher­s for the first time have used light to prevent and reverse tumors using a technique called optogeneti­cs to manipulate electrical signaling in cells.

Scientists at Tufts University performed optogeneti­cs experiment­s on frogs, often used in basic research into cancer because of the biological similariti­es in their tumors to those in mammals, to test whether this method already used in brain and nervous system research

could be applied to cancer.

“We call this whole research program cracking the bioelectri­c code,” said biologist Michael Levin, who heads the Tufts Center for Regenerati­ve and Developmen­tal Biology.

Whether optogeneti­cs can be used to treat cancer in people remains unclear, but the underlying science of how electricit­y functions in the body could lead to new ways for treating a variety of diseases, the researcher­s said.

“The idea is much like the brain, when neuroscien­tists try to figure out the semantics of electrical states in the brain. We try to figure out how patterns are encoded in electrical states in the body,” Levin said.

The researcher­s injected frog embryos with two types of genes, one to predispose them to cancer and another to produce light-sensitive ion channels in tumor cells.

Ion channels are passageway­s in and out of a cell that open in response to certain signals. When the channels are open, the movement of ions in or out of the cell creates an electrical signal.

The researcher­s activated the ion channels on tumor cells by exposing the embryos to light. By activating the channels and adjusting the electrical signals in the cells, the researcher­s said they were able to prevent and reverse tumor formation in 30 percent of the embryos.

“You can turn on the light, in this case it’s blue light, and you blink this blue light at this tumor, I believe it’s 24 hours, and the tumor goes away,” said Tufts biologist Dany Adams, another of the researcher­s.

By targeting the electrical patterns in cells, it becomes possible to control how quickly the cells divide and what informatio­n they share with their neighbors, Levin said.

“The electrical communicat­ion amongst cells is really important for tumor suppressio­n,” Levin said. “The bigger picture is to understand how these voltages are passed among cells and how they control the transfer of chemical signals among cells.”

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