Toronto Fashion Monitor
NewsXML Home
Fashion Cares 2006
All News
NEW! Fashion Blog
NEW! Celebrity Q&A
Fashion News
Beauty News
Celebrity News
Fashion Models
Celebrity Moms
Gossip
Romance
Celebrity Style
Shopping
Movies
Music
Television
Design
Books
Hot Tech
Travel
Gourmet
Lifestyle
FASHIONWEEK
Academy Awards
Health
Beauty TopList
Beauty Reviews
Home and Garden
Ask the Expert!
Sales and Offers
Google
Web
Fashion Monitor
Subscribe to receive our weekly newsletter!
Subscribe
Unsubscribe
Beauty Guide

Nicotine Linked to Breast Cancer Growth and Spread

Nicotine is not a conventional carcinogen, but rather it combines with other yet to be determined factors to enable cancer growth.

 


A study published in Cancer Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, suggests a possible role for nicotine in breast tumor development and metastases.

“Although numerous studies indicate the role of nicotine exposure in tumor promotion, little is known about the effect of nicotine on breast tumor development, especially on the metastatic process of breast cancer,” said lead author Chang Yan Chen, Ph.D., M.D., at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

 


Through a series of in vitro tests Chen and her team of researchers determined that breast epithelial-like MCF10A cells and cancerous MCF7 cells both express several subunits of nAChR (nicotine receptor), that when bound, initiate a signaling process, potentially increasing cell growth and migration.

“The best known role of nAChR is in the nerve system,” Chen said. “Although cells from various tissue origins express different subunits of nAChR, we know very little about the functions of nAChR in non-neuronal cells and tissues, in particular in mammary cells.”

“We were able to determine that mammary cells express different subunits of nAChR and that nicotine, possibly through perturbing cell cycle checkpoints, potentiates tumorigenesis in mammary cancer-prone or cancer cells,” Chen said.

In vivo studies confirmed these findings. When injected into the tail of a mouse the cancerous MCF7 cells migrated to the lungs.

From in vivo and in vitro studies, it indicates that nicotine is not a conventional carcinogen, but rather it combines with other yet to be determined factors to enable tumorigenesis. 
 Other news

ADHD Linked to Depression, Poor Health in Moms

Lack of Sleep Leads to Heart Disease

Vitamins, Minerals Don't Fight Cancers?

Eating at Buffets Equals Obesity

New Uses for Botox Found

Alzheimer’s Disease: Women Affected More Often than Men

Seven Ways to Save Money on Prescription Drugs

Obesity May Alter Thyroid Function

New Camera Detects Breast Tumors Even Better

Long-lasting Cold or Sinusitis?

Do You Know You’re Having a Stroke?

High Blood Pressure Worse in African Americans than in White Men

Smoking Causes Bladder Cancer

Allergies May Help Prevent Cancer

Testosterone Therapy may Harm Women

Peanut Allergy Can be Prevented

Vaccines for Adults: Which Do You Need?

Ten Signs of Disease: What Not to Ignore

Eating Grapes Fights High Blood Pressure

Drinking Milk to Ease Allergy to Dairy?

Copyright © 2004 VG Systems Consulting Inc
liveinternet.ru