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Cancer’s one-way ticket to the brain

The discovery of a genetic "ticket" that grants cancer cells entry to the brain in mice could lead to drugs that would stop human cancers spreading in the same way

HOW do cancer cells get into the brain? A “ticket” made of three genes seems to grant them access in mice. The discovery could one day lead to drugs that cancel out a similar ticket in people.

Around 10 per cent of people whose cancer has metastasised, or spread beyond the original site, develop brain tumours. But it’s a mystery how cancer cells get past the “blood-brain barrier”, which prevents the passage of most cells.

To investigate, and his colleagues at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York city injected human breast cancer cells into the arteries of mice. Three key genes were expressed in those cells that infiltrated the brain: one that helped cancer cells “stick” to blood vessels in the brain, another that is known to make capillaries leaky, and a third that makes cancer cells mobile (Nature, ).

Topics: Cancer