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Nicotine
May Speed Lung Cancer Growth
LONDON (Reuters) -
Nicotine in cigarettes not only causes cancer, it may also speed
up the growth of existing tumors.
Research by scientists at the Oregon
National Primate Research Center in Beaverton suggests that nicotine
stimulates the production of a molecule that can make lung cancer
cells more aggressive and encourages them to divide and grow.
"Smoking may boost the growth of
existing tumors as well as triggering cancer," New Scientist magazine
said on Wednesday.
The molecule, called acetylcholine,
is a neurotransmitter, or message-carrying chemical, in the brain
and nerves. Eliot Spindel and his colleagues found that some cancerous
cells have receptors, or molecular doorways into cells, for the
molecule.
They also discovered that fast-growing
cells make large amounts of the molecule and have a feedback loop
so that the acetylcholine they make encourages them to divide
and grow.
But when the scientists cut the
loop by blocking the receptors with the nerve gas antidote atropine
the cells stopped growing.
"Our discovery reveals the little
extra push by nicotine," said Spindel, who reported his research
in the journal Life Sciences.
He believes it may be possible,
though not easy, to adapt drugs such as atropine to treat lung
cancer but added that the correct dose and making sure it doesn't
affect the nervous system would be crucial.
"This loop can be revved up by
smoking," Spindel said, "so there's no question that not smoking
is the best thing you can do."
Reference
Source 89
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