Fueling cell invasion. Duke Today, March 22, 2022. From a tiny worm, new clues to how metastatic cancer cells power their deadly spread.
Tag Archives: cancer
Imaging a living scaffold
Link
Imaging a living scaffold. Duke Today, July 7, 2020. Light-up proteins in the sheet-like matrix that encases tissues offer new toolkit for studying everything from kidney disease to aging.
ID verification, now for cancer
Link
ID verification, now for cancer. Duke Today, Nov. 22, 2019.
Tiny devices made of DNA could detect cancer with fewer false alarms
Cells bulge to squeeze through barriers
Link
Cells bulge to squeeze through barriers. Nov. 27, 2017. Duke scientists have discovered a new tool in the cell’s invasion machinery that may help explain cancer’s ability to spread. Time-lapse imaging of the worm C. elegans reveals a fleeting protrusion that wedges into a tiny gap in the protective layer that surrounds the cell, and swells until the breach is wide enough for the cell to squeeze through. The findings could point to new ways to prevent metastasis, the leading cause of cancer-related deaths. Picked up by Futurity and STAT.