This is a news story, published by Home, that relates primarily to Stanford Medicine news.
For more biology news, you can click here:
more biology newsFor more news from Home, you can click here:
more news from HomeOtherweb, Inc is a public benefit corporation, dedicated to improving the quality of news people consume. We are non-partisan, junk-free, and ad-free. We use artificial intelligence (AI) to remove junk from your news feed, and allow you to select the best science news, business news, entertainment news, and much more. If you like biology news, you might also like this article about
longtime cancer biologist. We are dedicated to bringing you the highest-quality news, junk-free and ad-free, about your favorite topics. Please come every day to read the latest cancer cell news, cancer cells news, biology news, and other high-quality news about any topic that interests you. We are working hard to create the best news aggregator on the web, and to put you in control of your news feed - whether you choose to read the latest news through our website, our news app, or our daily newsletter - all free!
cell deathHome
•80% Informative
Stanford Medicine researchers hope new technique will flip lymphoma protein’s normal action — from preventing cell death to triggering it.
Their method accomplishes this by artificially bringing together two proteins in such a way that the new compound switches on a set of cell death genes, ultimately driving tumor cells to turn on themselves.
Cancer is often able to rapidly adapt to therapies that target only one of the disease’s weak spots.
Researchers hope their strategy will avoid the treatment resistance that seems so common in cancer.
The research team hopes that by blasting the cells with multiple different cell death signals at once, the cancer will not survive long enough to evolve resistance.
VR Score
80
Informative language
78
Neutral language
62
Article tone
semi-formal
Language
English
Language complexity
57
Offensive language
possibly offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
long-living
External references
2
Source diversity
2
Affiliate links
no affiliate links