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Researcher Unlocks Links Between Complex Carbohydrates And Metastasis.

Women's Health Weekly

| October 04, 2001 | COPYRIGHT 2001 NewsRX. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

2001 OCT 4 - (NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) --

Research at the University of Georgia may lead to a revolutionary breed of treatments aimed at preventing the spread of cancer.

Michael Pierce, a professor of biochemistry and molecular biology, has discovered an enzyme that could help unravel the mystery of how cancer spreads in the human body. If he and his team of researchers can find an inhibitor of this enzyme that works in the body, they may be able to develop a drug that would bind to that enzyme and prevent or slow the migration of cancer cells.

"The real killer is when cancer spreads. Almost every cancer that kills does so because it invades tissues and then moves to another location," Pierce said. "If you can remove the tumor and irradiate everything around it, there's a good chance the person will survive. If the cancer cells have gone to another tissue, you can't really find the tumor until it grows larger and by then it's very difficult to treat."

In his lab at UGA's Complex Carbohydrate Research Center, Pierce works to understand how carbohydrates affect cell adhesion and migration. His research, which focuses on breast and pancreatic cancer, is supported by grants of more than $2 million from the National Cancer Institute.

To migrate, a cell must achieve a delicate balance between holding on and letting go. Pierce compares it to walking on a frozen pond. Somewhere between slipping on the ice and freezing to it is the amount of traction that will allow movement.

"A cell has to be able to adhere in order to move, but if it adheres too much, it stops moving," Pierce said.

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