<code id='A3B98EFDE4'></code><style id='A3B98EFDE4'></style>
    • <acronym id='A3B98EFDE4'></acronym>
      <center id='A3B98EFDE4'><center id='A3B98EFDE4'><tfoot id='A3B98EFDE4'></tfoot></center><abbr id='A3B98EFDE4'><dir id='A3B98EFDE4'><tfoot id='A3B98EFDE4'></tfoot><noframes id='A3B98EFDE4'>

    • <optgroup id='A3B98EFDE4'><strike id='A3B98EFDE4'><sup id='A3B98EFDE4'></sup></strike><code id='A3B98EFDE4'></code></optgroup>
        1. <b id='A3B98EFDE4'><label id='A3B98EFDE4'><select id='A3B98EFDE4'><dt id='A3B98EFDE4'><span id='A3B98EFDE4'></span></dt></select></label></b><u id='A3B98EFDE4'></u>
          <i id='A3B98EFDE4'><strike id='A3B98EFDE4'><tt id='A3B98EFDE4'><pre id='A3B98EFDE4'></pre></tt></strike></i>

          explore

          explore

          author:hotspot    Page View:551
          Stain of a biopsy specimen of a rhabdoid tumor -- health coverage from STAT
          Stain of a biopsy specimen of a rhabdoid tumor. Wikimedia Commons

          Most targeted cancer drugs work like tranquilizer darts, snaring an overzealous gene that has spurred the cell into murderously rapid growth.

          But many tumors don’t have a hyperactive gene. Like the mayhem in “Cat in the Hat,” they are enabled by parental absence. They grow because the genes that are meant to provide discipline, guiding the activity of other genes or self-destructing a cell whose DNA is too damaged, are broken or missing.

          advertisement

          These tumors have bedeviled researchers for decades. Restoring or fixing a protein is far harder than breaking it. And that’s bad news for humanity: Cancer is far more likely to be caused by such “tumor-suppressor” genes than by one gene run amok. 

          Get unlimited access to award-winning journalism and exclusive events.

          Subscribe Log In

          explore

          At least 13 dead in Texas as scorching temps continue
          At least 13 dead in Texas as scorching temps continue

          1:17FirefighterEMTWilliamDorseyandfirefighterEMTRodrigoPinedatreatamigrantwomansufferingfromheatexha

          read more
          ProMED sees offers of support, but its future remains unclear
          ProMED sees offers of support, but its future remains unclear

          ProMEDmapScreengrabviaProMEDWithitsfutureindoubt,ProMED,thefinanciallystrappedinfectiousdiseasessurv

          read more
          ChatGPT in medicine: STAT answers readers' burning questions
          ChatGPT in medicine: STAT answers readers' burning questions

          MikeReddyforSTATArtificialintelligenceisoftendescribedasablackbox:anunknowable,mysteriousforcethatop

          read more

          How neuroscience research could help beat back brain cancer

          NewresearchledbyStanfordneuro-oncologistMichelleMonjeshineslightontheelectrochemicalsignalingpathway