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  • Press release - 13/06/2024

    Position of the cell nucleus affects epigenetics and therefore gene activity and cell function

    Depending on whether the cell nucleus of an epithelial cell is located on the outer or inner side of the tissue, the genome is more or less acetylated - genes can therefore be translated easier or harder. Scientists from the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) have demonstrated this for the first time in the development of the Drosophila wing.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/position-cell-nucleus-affects-epigenetics-and-therefore-gene-activity-and-cell-function
  • Press release - 15/05/2024

    Tumour tissue on a chip: new possibilities for cell therapies and personalized medicine

    How do tumors react to a certain therapeutic approach? Knowing this before the start of a therapy would be of enormous value for people suffering from cancer as well as for the doctors treating them. Researchers have now made this very observation possible for the CAR-T cell therapy. This allows us to individually investigate how exactly these tumor cells react to the planned therapy.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/tumour-tissue-chip-new-possibilities-cell-therapies-and-personalized-medicine
  • Press release - 03/01/2024

    Reprogrammed fat cells support tumor growth

    Mutations of the tumor suppressor p53 not only have a growth-promoting effect on the cancer cells themselves, but also influence the cells in the tumor's microenvironment. Scientists at the Weizmann Institute in Israel and at the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) have now shown that p53-mutated mouse breast cancer cells reprogram fat cells.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/reprogrammed-fat-cells-support-tumor-growth
  • Press release - 16/06/2023

    What determines whether breast cancer cells can form metastases?

    In most cancers, it is not the growth of the primary tumor that determines the prognosis for the patient, but whether it will spread and form metastases. This process is very complex. There are often years between the development of the cancer and the aggressive growth of the metastases. Scientists from the DKFZ, the HI-STEM, the Ruhr University Bochum, Helmholtz Munich and ETH Zurich have studied and identified metastasis growth in breast cancer

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/what-determines-whether-breast-cancer-cells-can-form-metastases
  • Press release - 04/05/2023

    Gamma delta T cells can fight aggressive breast cancer

    Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive and deadly form of breast cancer with limited treatment options. Tumor growth and relapse of TNBC are driven by breast cancer stem cells, and improved therapies that can eliminate those hardy cells are urgently needed. Researchers from the University of Frieburg discovered that coordinated differentiation and changes in the metabolism of breast cancer stem cells make them invisible for…

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/gamma-delta-t-cells-can-fight-aggressive-breast-cancer
  • Press release - 20/12/2022

    Enzyme inhibition promotes bone formation and curbs the development of bone metastases

    In our bones, specialized cells called osteoblasts are responsible for building up bone substance. A team of researchers led by scientists from the DKFZ-Hector Cancer Institute at the University Medical Center Mannheim* and the University Medical Center Hamburg Eppendorf has now identified an enzyme that controls the activity of osteoblasts.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/enzyme-inhibition-promotes-bone-formation-and-curbs-development-bone-metastases
  • Press release - 09/11/2022

    New Molecular Microscopy Uncovers how Breast Cancer Spreads

    Researchers have created a tool that maps how breast cancer grows in previously unseen detail, and highlights how the cells around the tumour may be the key to controlling the spread of disease. The new technology can trace which populations of breast cancer cells are responsible for the spread of the disease, and for the first time highlights how the location of cancer cells could be as important as mutations in tumor growth The new study is…

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/new-molecular-microscopy-uncovers-how-breast-cancer-spreads
  • Press release - 24/10/2022

    How tumors suppress the development of metastases

    Why do metastases often only appear after the original tumor has been surgically removed? Scientists from the German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ) and the Mannheim Medical Faculty of Heidelberg University have now published an explanation for this phenomenon. They were able to identify a messenger substance of the cancer cells that locally promotes the growth of the primary tumor.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/wie-tumoren-die-entstehung-von-metastasen-unterdruecken
  • Press release - 25/04/2022

    Reprogrammed macrophages promote spread of breast cancer

    Metastatic breast cancer cells abuse macrophages, a type of immune cell, to promote the settlement of cancer metastases in the lungs. The reprogrammed macrophages stimulate blood vessel cells to secrete a cocktail of metastasis-promoting proteins that are part of the so-called metastatic niche.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/reprogrammed-macrophages-promote-spread-breast-cancer
  • Press release - 17/02/2022

    New organ-on-chip system enables precise monitoring of 3D tumour tissue outside the body

    A research team around Dr. Andreas Weltin, Dr. Jochen Kieninger and Johannes Dornhof from the Department of Microsystems Engineering (IMTEK) at the University of Freiburg has developed a system that, among other things, makes it possible to study the development of tumour cells outside the human body in a three-dimensional environment.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/new-organ-chip-system-enables-precise-monitoring-3d-tumour-tissue-outside-body
  • Press release - 18/11/2021

    Overcoming resistance to treatment for breast, bowel, and pancreatic cancer

    As cancer progresses, the tumor cells continually change, ultimately resulting in a tumor consisting of a large number of different cell clones with different characteristics. This is referred to as "tumor heterogeneity". In many cases, the cancer cells become resistant to the treatments available.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/overcoming-resistance-treatment-breast-bowel-and-pancreatic-cancer
  • Press release - 14/09/2021

    Bridging antibodies plus enhancer can destroy breast cancer cells

    Scientists from the German Cancer Research Center (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ) have developed antibodies that have two antigen-binding sites and can couple cancer cells with effector cells of the immune system. In laboratory tests, these bridging antibodies, together with an enhancer antibody, were able to specifically mobilize the body's own immune defenses and destroy breast cancer cells.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/Bridging-antibodies-plus-enhancer-can-destroy-breast-cancer-cells
  • Press release - 11/03/2021

    Researchers recommend earlier start of breast cancer screening with family history of ovarian cancer

    Women have an increased risk of breast cancer if they have a family history of this disease. However, the risk may also be higher if first-degree family members have another type of cancer, according to a study by a team of scientists and physicians from the National Center for Tumor Diseases (NCT) Heidelberg, the German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) and Heidelberg University Hospital (UKHD), as well as international colleagues.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/press-release/researchers-recommend-earlier-start-breast-cancer-screening-family-history-ovarian-cancer
  • Translational oncology - 26/05/2020 NCT_181204_3435.jpg

    Translation: driver of cancer medicine

    The fight against cancer is a pressing issue. Although technological advances in the treatment, prevention and early detection of cancer have improved over the past few decades, the number of people affected is increasing. Cancer medicine now wants to counteract this by joining forces with other players involved in the field.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/news/translation-driver-cancer-medicine
  • Article - 11/06/2019 ZurHausen.jpg

    New pathogens in beef and cow's milk contributing to the risk of cancer

    A team of researchers led by Nobel laureate Prof. Dr. med. Dr. h.c. mult. Harald zur Hausen has discovered a new type of infectious agent in dairy and meat products produced from European cattle that increases the risk for colon and breast cancer. These so-called Bovine Meat and Milk Factors (BMMFs) are small DNA molecules that are similar in sequence to both bacterial plasmids and certain viruses.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/news/new-pathogens-in-beef-and-cows-milk-contributing-to-the-risk-of-cancer
  • New edition - 24/05/2019 Magnetic resonance image of brain metastases.

    Tumour metastasis

    Cancer is usually not curable when metastases have formed in the body. Metastases are often resistant to drugs that have successfully eliminated the primary tumour. The basic features of the complex process of metastasis are now known, but many details still remain elusive. Intensive research activities are focusing on new therapeutic concepts aimed at developing effective anti-metastatic therapies.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/dossier/tumour-metastasis
  • Article - 16/04/2019 20190218_Foto_Labor_Quelle_UniversitNatsklinikum_Heidelberg.jpg

    Tumour monitoring using liquid biopsy

    Liquid biopsy, the analysis of cancer biomarkers and circulating tumour cells in body fluids such as blood, is revolutionising the diagnosis and monitoring of cancer. It has also been possible to expand circulating tumour cells from the blood under laboratory conditions. It is expected that in the future, liquid biopsy will be able to precisely characterise tumour cells at every stage of a cancer.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/news/tumour-monitoring-using-liquid-biopsy
  • Article - 22/03/2019 Prof. Lichter (left) and Prof. Schneeweiss, who run the Translational Breast Cancer Programme in Heidelberg, in the laboratory

    Personalised therapies for treating metastasing breast cancer

    Breast cancer is characterised by broad genetic diversity. Successful treatment is made even more difficult by the fact that, in advanced breast cancer, the properties of metastases often differ significantly from the primary tumour. The Heidelberg CATCH study is now collecting genetic profiles from patients' metastasis tissue samples, which can be used to tailor therapy to individual requirements.

    https://biopro-v9-test-gi.xanium.io/en/article/news/personalisierte-therapieansaetze-bei-metastasiertem-brustkrebs
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