The End Of Cancer
by
Bill Walker
by Bill Walker
Cancer
is doomed. Just as the CIA has extended Castro's lifespan to many
times the natural half-life of a Latin American dictator, the FDA
bureaucracy has protected and nurtured cancer from the biotech industry.
But cancer's time is running out. Soon malignancy, like polio and
other obsolete diseases, will exist only in the despairing, forgotten
residents of foreign-aid regimes. The question remains: will cancer
be wiped out before you and your family die horribly, or after?
Little details like this matter.
Biologists
have known for decades that there are other mammal species that
control cancer a thousand times better than our shorter-lived simian-derived
bodies. Bowhead
whales weigh 500 times as much as a human being, and live over
twice as long. Bowhead cells have been grown and studied to a limited
degree at the University of Southern Maine and other academic labs.
But cells from the USM repository are not made available to commercial
biotech companies, thanks to Endangered Species Act regulations.
(It is OK for one arm of the US government to subsidize the rocket
harpoons and outboard motors of the Inupiat who slaughter the ancient
Bowheads, but to let evil commercial medical researchers derive
benefit for mere human children from already-dead whales would be
immoral, of course).
Looking
at how Bowhead cells work (for instance, by using a protein-expression
chip and comparing the expression patterns in the Bowhead to those
of human cells) would make it too easy to cure cancer (and possibly
less patentable… maybe The Krill Diet is all we need?). But even
without helpful hints from our fellow mammals, the weak points of
cancer cells are becoming known.
Why
Cancer Exists
You
exist as a sort of cellular economy. Your individual cells specialize
and trade with each other; some process food, some fight viruses
and bacteria, some become academic specialists (brain cells) and
read articles on LewRockwell.com . The metabolic economic benefits
of specialization allow you to maintain the billions of neurons
that contain the relatively stable meme patterns that are "you".
Until one day, an error (actually, at least four errors) in just
one cell's DNA returns your system to the "nasty, brutish, and short"
state of the war of all against all. Dividing uncontrollably, using
resources while producing nothing, the criminal progeny of this
one rogue cell can destroy the whole body.
Sometimes
cells are subverted by outside agitators. Many viruses use cancer-causing
factors to make infected cells divide uncontrollably. Sure, it eventually
kills the host, but just as agricultural subsidies make Archer Daniels
Midland bigger than non-subsidized companies while weakening the
taxpayer host, cancer gives a genetic advantage to the virus. Removing
these outside agitators (such as papilloma viruses) through vaccination
is one approach to reducing cancer rates.
To
prevent the overthrow of the body by rogue terrorist sleeper cells,
most mammals (but not rodents… which is one of many reasons that
mice are the worst possible cancer research animal) turn off the
telomerase gene in their somatic cells. This allows the telomeres
of body cells to shorten at each division. So, most cells can only
divide a limited number of times, meaning that they cannot usually
accumulate enough mutations to become malignant.
For
example, "BJ fibroblast" human skin cells can divide about
90100 times in cell culture before they senesce (stop dividing).
But cancer cells that turn on their telomerase gene can go on to
be fully "immortalized" and divide forever; telomerase-positive
HeLa cancer cells have been growing in culture since the 1950s.
Normal BJs and other normal body cells that have had telomerase
added via retrovirus can also divide forever (or at least 400 times
so far with no sign of slowing down, which is multiple human lifetimes’
worth).
For
a cell to lose its respect for other cell’s property rights and
go on to become the cellular equivalent of a politician, at least
four to six genetic mutations have to occur. These mutations make
cells cancerous, but they also make them different from normal cells,
and are thus the Achilles’ heels of all cancers. The odds of any
particular mutation are quite low, so each mutation must first occur
in one cell, that precancerous cell must divide twenty times or
so until the next mutation occurs within that mutated population,
and so on. And so they use up all their TTAGGG
repeats, their telomeres run out, and the cells flatten out
and "senesce"… Unless before the cells senesce they turn
their telomerase gene back on. 90% of malignant tumors have active
telomerase.
Telomerase
As A Target
The
problem with most "cancer therapies" is that they use
the baseball bat principle: hit the patient with a baseball bat,
and maybe the impact will kill more of the cells that are dividing
than those that aren’t. Radiation and conventional chemotherapy
do kill more dividing cells, but cancer cells have already lost
many of their error-checking systems. Thus they change and evolve
to evade the baseball bat strategies.
Another
problem with the baseball bat approach is that you NEED your cells
to divide: immune system cells, gut cells, etc. Also, these therapies
induce more DNA damage in normal dividing cells, producing fresh
generations of future cancer cells. (Just as bombing of normal civil
populations produces more terrorist recruits).
So
the goal is to find targets that normal cells don’t use, or can
do without for a while. Telomerase is such a target. It is especially
vulnerable because of its tight regulation; even wildly growing
cancer cells only have about three active telomerase molecules per
cell.
Where
is telomerase used in normal cells? Germline cells (sperm and egg-producing
cells) obviously must have active telomerase; otherwise the whole
human race would run out of telomere and senesce. Lab mice that
have their telomerase gene knocked out of all their cells including
the germline are normal for six generations, then senesce all at
once. (Yeah, once we finally produce the übermouse
in the lab, they’re going to kick our butts for what we’ve done
to them.
When
the night is done,
Their
plan will be unfurled,
By the
Dawning of the Sun,
They’ll
take o-ver the…)
Stem
cells turn telomerase on at a low level while they are producing
new daughter cells; this is one reason that stem cells are suspected
by some of being the progenitors of most cancer. But most normal
cells don’t use telomerase at all (believe me, I’ve looked; I grew
BJ fibroblasts in fetal serum for weeks trying to get them to switch
on enough telomerase to pick up in a TRAP assay on 10,000 cells;
no dice).
The
good news is that telomerase-positive cancer cells stabilize their
telomeres at short lengths, typically 37,000 base pairs. Once
their telomerase is knocked out they will run out of telomere long
before normal cells would; normal cells typically have 1525,000
base pairs at birth. And cancer cells tend to have unstable genomes
and a high casualty rate from errors during division. (This is why
many cancer cells are vulnerable to caffeine; they can’t repair
the DNA breaks induced by the toxic trimethylxanthine). Without
active telomerase, many quick-dividing cancer cell lines are doomed
to quick extinction.
Also
good news is that according to cell-culture results, stem cells
will survive telomerase suppression for the time that it takes to
kill off the cancer, then rebuild their telomeres to their preset
length when the telomerase inhibitor is removed.
So
if we can use a drug to inactivate telomerase, we could kill off
the cancer, then allow the stem- and germline cells to recover.
This has already been done in a dish via a variety of methods. Geron
Corporation has a variety of oligomers that bind to the RNA
site of telomerase and inactivate it. There are also small-molecule
telomerase inhibitors, which will probably prove to be more effective
in reaching every tumor cell.
For
a long time studies have shown that populations who drink green
tea are less susceptible to cancer. A team of Japanese researchers
elucidated one possible anti-cancer mechanism of green tea in 1998.1
It turns out that green tea, or rather the epigallocatechin gallate
(EGCG) that it contains, is a telomerase inhibitor. When they treated
cancer cell cultures with EGCG at levels found in heavy green tea
drinkers, the cultures grew but the cells lost telomere length at
each division. After a couple months of treatment, the cells ran
out of telomere and stopped dividing. So it turns out that green
tea might not just prevent cancers… maybe it has been curing some
of them. But of course we want a stronger, more controllable effect.
The Japanese group that demonstrated the anti-telomerase effect
of green tea has since developed new synthetic molecules, based
on EGCG, that inhibit telomerase more thoroughly and at lower doses.2
Other
classes of telomerase inhibitor have
been demonstrated, as have other telomere-affecting
strategies. Soon (I mean next month soon; these screening systems
already exist) robotic screens will be done to find more. Modern
biology is depending more and more on Nature’s way of doing things:
don’t try to think, just try every possible combination. Cells will
be infected with a telomerase and a luciferase driven by the same
promoter. Thousands of 96-well cell culture plates will be treated
with hundreds of thousands of chemicals; those that switch off the
glowing luciferase (and therefore also the telomerase) without killing
the cells will be further investigated. The silicon-based march
of knowledge far outclasses the limited DNA-change options of mere
carbon-based cancers. Metastasis is irrelevant. Resistance is irrelevant.
They will be assimilated.
An
interesting byproduct of these robotic screens will be the discovery
of better telomerase stimulators (the resveratrol in red wine is
already known to activate telomerase in some cells). After cancer
is eliminated, some people will live long enough to want telomerase
temporarily activated to rejuvenate their cells’ capacity to divide.
The
Limits Of Telomerase Inhibitors
Telomerase
inhibitors can’t completely eliminate all cancers. A minority of
cancers use an alternative pathway for lengthening telomeres, creatively
named the ALT pathway (Alternative Telomere Lengthening). ALT uses
the recombination mechanisms in the cell to lengthen short telomeres
by matching them to long telomeres and duplicating the long telomere
onto the short-telomere chromosome. ALT cells don’t grow quite as
fast as telomerase-competent cancer cells, and it’s not clear whether
they can be as effectively invasive. To exterminate ALT cells will
require treatments based on other molecular differences between
normal and ALT cells. These are starting to be elucidated; normal
cells don’t need to recombine their telomeres when they divide,
so molecular targets for inhibition of ALT should be identified
soon.
The
End Of Cancer, Or The End Of You
If
telomerase inhibitors were a new kind of computer chip, they would
have been on every Wal-Mart pharmacy shelf and selling for ten dollars
a bottle by now. However, in the US it has been decided that only
computers (sorry: "Silicon-Americans") may benefit from
the free market. Technologies that enhance mere humans, like medicine,
education, communication, transportation, etc. are kept firmly within
the control of guilds and government. So before telomerase inhibitors
get down to the level of your doctor, they will have to run the
19-year, $897
million regulatory gauntlet while it is decided which large
pharmaceutical company will be granted a patent for something which
probably came out of some pathetic starving Lebanese grad student’s
work.
Meanwhile,
if you or your child get most types of cancer you will die a slow,
agonizing (but very profitable) death. You’ll be all: "Make
it stop! Make it stoooop!" And the doctor will be all: "The
DEA won’t let me give you too many pain drugs. You don’t want me
to lose my license, do you?" And you’ll be all: "AHHHHH!
AHHHH AUUUGH!" And so on, for several years of immeasurable
pain. Sound good to you?
A
New Paradigm: We Own Ourselves
The
current paradigm (same as the ancient paradigm) is that all humans
are owned by the State, who decides what chemicals may go into their
food and medicines. This paradigm makes sense from the viewpoint
of PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animalcules), in that
it keeps many pathogens and cancer lines off the endangered-species
list. But unless you believe in the rights-to-live of viruses and
trypanosomes, this sort of "humans-as-property" thinking
is suicidal.
Even
if you are a committed Socialist, it makes no sense to give the
FDA power to suppress free speech about drug effects, or to keep
the terminally ill from trying "unapproved" medications
for incurable diseases. For anyone who believes in any form of human
freedom, there can be no objection to allowing individuals to opt
out from the FDA "protection" of pharmaceutical interests.
People
are taught to fear free choice. They are told that their food will
be poisoned and their medicines ineffective (maybe as bad as Vioxx?
Or calcium-channel blockers? Or…) In the absence of an FDA with
power to force the commercial use or disuse of any particular chemical,
companies would struggle to produce the most effective medicine
and the cleanest food, under the watchful eyes of numerous independent
labs. Fraudulent or harmful drugs would be subject to lawsuit, and
"but it’s FDA-approved" would no longer be any defense.
In
a free system, life insurance companies, consumer magazines, and
other competing interests would provide medical databases. Maybe
even the AMA would become a force for "truth-in-medicine,"
as it was to some degree before the creation of the FDA. Under common
law but free of arbitrary regulation, drug development would be
as fast as computer development. Cancer would be extinct and human
beings would finally, really, own their own bodies.
Cancer
Delenda Est, Ergo FDA Delenda Est
Notes
- Naasani,
I., Seimiya, H., and Tsuruo, T. Telomerase inhibition, telomere
shortening and senescence of cancer cells by tea catechins. Biochem.
Biophys. Res. Commun. 249: 391396, 1998.
- Seimiya
H et al. Telomere Shortening and Growth Inhibition of Human Cancer
Cells by Novel Synthetic Telomerase Inhibitors MST-312, MST-295,
and MST-199. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, Vol. 1, 657665,
July 2002
May
3, 2005
Bill
Walker [send him mail]
works as a Research Associate in telomere biology at an undisclosed
(thanks to legal threats from his tax-financed employer) location.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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