Thursday, September 10, 2009

Adult stem cell prostate cancer coverage summary

Below is a summary of news coverage of the recent announcement by researchers at Columbia University Medical Center that a new type of stem cell discovered in the prostate of adult mice can be a source of prostate cancer:

Agence France Presse (AFP), September 9, 2009: "Newly found stem cell causes prostate cancer: mouse study":

PARIS — Scientists in the United States, working with mice, have found a new type of stem cell in the prostate gland and shown that mutations in it can cause cancer, a study released Wednesday says. The discovery boosts evidence that cancers can be caused by modifications in stem cells, the dynamic precursor cells that develop into and replenish the body's specific tissues, it says. It also appears to resolve a mystery about the origin of prostate cancer, and could open new pathways for treatment of the deadly disease.

Reuters, September 9, 2009 5:29pm EDT: "Researchers find prostate cancer stem cell":

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Researchers have found a stem cell, a kind of master cell, that may cause at least some types of prostate cancer. Their findings are only experimental -- the stem cells were found in mice -- but could explain at least some types of prostate cancer and eventually offer new ways to treat it, they reported on Wednesday in the journal Nature.

HealthDay News, September 9, 2009: "Getting Closer to the Origins of Prostate Cancer: Newly discovered stem cell, common STD could help spur tumors, studies find":

"Two studies take significant steps toward solving major mysteries about prostate cancer -- the exact spot in the gland where tumors can originate, and how to distinguish fast-growing malignancies that are life-threatening from the slower-growing kind that can safely be left alone."

"One study, reported in the Sept. 9 online edition of Nature, describes a previously unknown form of prostate stem cell that can become cancerous if genetic controls go haywire. The prostate consists of several layers of cells, with the lowest, the basal layer, playing a supporting role and the luminal layer, just above it, doing the actual work of the gland."

"The second report, published online Sept. 9 in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, uncovered an association between infection with a sexually transmitted parasite, Trichomonas vaginalis, and an increased risk of prostate cancer, especially the virulent form of the disease."

BBC News, 10 September 2009: "Stem cell link to prostate cancer":

A newly identified type of stem cell may cause some cases of prostate cancer, research on mice suggests.
The cells, found among those which line the inner cavity of the prostate gland, can produce copies of themselves, and other, more mature cell types. But researchers showed that when the cells were deliberately mutated by switching off a tumour suppressor gene they rapidly formed tumours. The Columbia University study appears in the journal Nature.