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We are now seeing the cloning of humans, mixtures of human and animal embryos, embryonic stem cell research (which makes and then destroys human embryos), the destruction of "extra" frozen IVF human embryos, and the sale of human fetal body parts, all presented by the media in very desensitizing ways. 

We must recognize that every abortion and every embryo produced and destroyed for "research" causes the death of a living, defenseless human being, if allowed to develop in an uninterrupted way.

Every one of these could be our neighbor, relative, or friend. Would we want someone we know to be treated this way? Why do we then allow it to happen just because we haven't met these little ones? Dignity is due to every human life from fertilization through the moment of natural death.

-- Michael Lathem, M.D. 

 
Looping Genes May Hold a Key to Understanding Breast Cancer (4/08) PDF Print E-mail

LOOPING GENES MAY HOLD A KEY TO UNDERSTANDING BREAST CANCER. Another piece of the puzzle that is breast cancer has been found by University of Queensland researchers.

Dr Melissa Brown, from UQ's School of Molecular and Microbial Sciences, and her team have discovered how a particular gene associated with breast cancer behaves, which may lead to better testing for the debilitating disease. 

Dr Brown and Dr Juliet French at UQ, together with their colleagues at The University of Oxford, studied the BRCA1 gene and found that it exists in a looped formation.

"Our studies suggest that BRCA1 looks a bit like a bow when the gene is switched off, and that part of this 'bow' disappears when the gene is switched on," Dr Brown said.

"Interestingly, the shape of the bow changes in different breast cancer cells, raising the possibility that this gene looping may contribute to the cancer process."
 

She said ongoing studies would identify the specific DNA sequences and DNA binding molecules involved in BRCA1 gene looping.
 

"The status of these sequences in a larger cohort of breast cancer patients will also be determined," she said.

"This information may lead to more sensitive pre-symptomatic testing for breast cancer and the identification of new therapeutic targets."
[10-Apr-2008, http://www.news-medical.net/?id=37223, Medical Research News]
 http://www.uq.edu.au/

 
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