Scientists have discovered that a rare “mirror-image” version of the amino acid cysteine can dramatically slow the growth of ...
Researchers mapped distinct cancer cell communities within supratentorial ependymoma tumors, showing how different cell types ...
Immunotherapy, which uses programmed immune cells to selectively destroy cancer cells, has transformed cancer treatment. However, cancer cells have developed immune evasion strategies, leading to poor ...
Immune cells engineered to sense cancer's metabolic byproducts can migrate to and infiltrate tumors, improving immunotherapy ...
A hidden clue may explain why some mutated cells become cancerous and others don’t: how fast they divide. A new study from researchers at Sinai Health in Toronto reveals that the total time it takes ...
The ability of mutations to cause cancer depends on how fast they force cells to divide, Sinai Health researchers have found. The study, led by Dr. Rod Bremner, a Senior Investigator at the ...
The finding suggests other chemo drugs, too, may be making cancer cells cause a surprising immune-system reaction.
New research published in Nature finds that tumor cells within supratentorial ependymomas (SE)—an aggressive childhood brain cancer—cluster into distinct tumor cell populations. Much like a ...