BBC cameras capture Glastonbury proposal during Sir Elton John’s duet with Brandon Flowers, thrilling viewers
‘Getting Elton and Brandon Flowers to play during your proposal takes some beating tbf.’
The Sunday Telegraph dedicates its entire front page to the 24 hours in Russia, leading with several stories on its front page. The main story reports the Wagner group halted their advances on Moscow after striking a deal with Putin. One correspondent reflects on the day Rostov-on-Don woke up to be on the front line of an historic moment in the Ukraine conflict
The front page leaves space for historian Robert Tombs, who believes Putin is “gravely weakened” but was able to avoid a “1917 moment.”
‘Getting Elton and Brandon Flowers to play during your proposal takes some beating tbf.’
Let the fire sale begin…
Different cancer types behave in different ways (Picture: Getty/Science Photo Libra)
Scientists have identified how a specific substance plays a key role in helping prostate cancer to spread and become harder to treat.
They hope the findings might offer new treatment options for aggressive prostate cancer.
A team at Nottingham Trent University found that ‘transglutaminase 2’ (TG2), which is abundant in many of the body’s cells, is responsible for driving a process which leads to the progression and spreading of the disease.
In the UK, prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men – with more than 52,000 diagnosed every year.
Early prostate cancer cells require the male hormone androgen to grow.
However they can become androgen-independent and therefore harder to treat with current therapies, as they advance.
Researchers suggest that until now it has not been clear how that process occurs.
‘This finding has opened a significant pathway for understanding other key mechanisms prostate cancer cells utilise to evade key regulatory pathways,’ Dr Adeola Atobatele, a scientist on the study.
The new study found that a mutant form of TG2 is overproduced in prostate cancer and remains trapped inside the nucleus of cells.
There it restricts the levels of androgen response – making cancer cells the more aggressive androgen-independent.
It also increases expression of the protein mucin-1, which is known to be responsible for the growth and spreading of cancer.
Mucin-1 forms a mucous barrier on cell surfaces which protects cancer cells, researchers found.
When researchers analysed biopsies of prostate cancer, they identified increased levels of TG2.
Based on the findings, the team proposes that controlling the activity of TG2 and mucin-1 may offer a new therapeutic option for aggressive prostate cancer.
Lead scientist Dr Elisabetta Verderio Edwards, from Nottingham Trent University’s School of Science and Technology, said: ‘We wanted to explore why some cancer cells become androgen-independent and as a result more aggressive and harder to treat.
‘Transglutaminase is a multifunctional protein in all tissues and is involved in multiple processes.
‘We have now deepened our understanding of its key role in aggressive disease in prostate cancer patients.
‘Understanding this pathway is incredibly important.
‘This process plays a key role in cancer’s ability to evade treatment and so warrants further investigation in terms of potential future treatment and therapy.’
The latest study, which also involved the Polyclinic Hospital University (University of Messina) in Italy, is published in the journal Cell Death and Disease.
MORE : Dog saves woman’s life by ‘sniffing out’ first warning sign of cancer
MORE : Bowel cancer plays deadly game of hide and seek, world-first study shows
He returned to the festival for his own set on the Pyramid Stage.
He’s set to become a free agent.
Zachariah seemed shocked to see Molly go, but not *that* upset…
Copyright WTX News 2024
Newspapers, News Summary, Truth and freedom
We bring you CNN BBC FOX EURO NEWS AL JAZEERA – all in one place. With a perfectly crafted email with your news summary
Login below or Register Now.
Already registered? Login.