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Updates from Europe PMC, a global database of life sciences literature

Posts tagged with cancer

Europe PMC team

 | 7 May 2014

 | 4 MINS READ

How healthy eating could starve out cancer

Europe PMC team

 | 7 May 2014

 | 4 MINS READ

How healthy eating could starve out cancer

Image Source: Serial/Trash Skin is not the only thing to wrinkle with age. Our genes also show signs of ageing – a process that can lead to cancer. A new study indicates that healthy eating can prevent cancer development and explains how this works. When genes get old Thanks to modern medical advancements, our average […]

Europe PMC team

 | 30 April 2014

 | 4 MINS READ

A two-pronged attack to stop cancer in its tracks

Europe PMC team

 | 30 April 2014

 | 4 MINS READ

A two-pronged attack to stop cancer in its tracks

Image Source: Serial/Trash Cancer results from an accumulation of mistakes or abnormalities in genes that normally control cell survival, growth and migration. Genes are the instruction manual for our cells, and when these instructions are altered cells may begin to multiply (proliferate) uncontrollably. The resulting mass of new cells forms the primary tumour, and when […]

Europe PMC team

 | 29 April 2014

 | 3 MINS READ

“So what exactly do you do?”

Europe PMC team

 | 29 April 2014

 | 3 MINS READ

“So what exactly do you do?”

By Clare Finlay, a PhD student at the Wolfson Centre for Age-Related Disease, King’s College London Note: Clare was highly commended for her entry. Check back tomorrow to read her brilliant summary on the blog. This is a question encountered by many a scientist, as the relevance of the receptor, enzyme or gene they have […]

Europe PMC team

 | 23 April 2014

 | 4 MINS READ

Cutting the supply line: a new anti-cancer strategy?

Europe PMC team

 | 23 April 2014

 | 4 MINS READ

Cutting the supply line: a new anti-cancer strategy?

Image Source: Serial/Trash After centuries of endeavour, scientists and doctors have made great strides towards improving cancer treatment. Nonetheless, while conventional therapy has undoubtedly saved innumerable lives, a worrying number of tumours remain inoperable and incurable by chemo- or radiotherapy. Thus, the search for more refined anti-cancer drugs continues, and paving the way is a […]

Europe PMC team

 | 22 April 2014

 | 4 MINS READ

Out of my comfort zone

Europe PMC team

 | 22 April 2014

 | 4 MINS READ

Out of my comfort zone

By Claire Sand, PhD student at King’s College London Note: Claire Sand was highly commended for her entry this year. She was a joint second-place winner in Access to Understanding 2013 competition. Check back tomorrow to read her entry. After my fantastic experience at Access to Understanding 2013, I was very keen to be involved […]

Europe PMC team

 | 6 November 2013

 | 4 MINS READ

Another brick in the wall

Europe PMC team

 | 6 November 2013

 | 4 MINS READ

Another brick in the wall

By Ian Le Guillou (University of Cambridge, UK) Awarded joint 2nd prize for Access to Understanding 2013 A mutation that allows cells to grow out of control could also provide a new way to target and destroy cancer cells. This potential Achilles’ heel comes from a mutation in a gene called PTEN, which is found in […]

Europe PMC team

 | 29 October 2013

 | 4 MINS READ

“Will you just stand still?” Scientists gain insight into metastatic lung cancer

Europe PMC team

 | 29 October 2013

 | 4 MINS READ

“Will you just stand still?” Scientists gain insight into metastatic lung cancer

By Katarzyna Makowska (University of Leeds, UK) Short-listed for Access to Understanding 2013 Brian J. McHugh and colleagues from University of Edinburgh and King’s College London have discovered a one-protein switch that makes normal lung cells behave like metastatic cancer cells. This exciting finding, published in PLOS One in July 2012, brings us closer to […]

Europe PMC team

 | 9 April 2013

 | 3 MINS READ

The Importance of Jargon

Europe PMC team

 | 9 April 2013

 | 3 MINS READ

The Importance of Jargon

by Ian Le Guillou, Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge Although contradictory to the hopes of the Access to Understanding competition, writing about the work described in ‘NLK is a Novel Therapeutic Target for PTEN Deficient Tumour Cells‘ made me realise the importance of scientific jargon. Yes, it makes research very difficult to understand for […]

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