How do cancer cells behave differently from healthy ones George Zaidan

Translator: Andrea McDonough
Reviewer: Bedirhan Cinar

We all start life as one single cell.

Then that cell divides and we are two cells,

then four,

then eight.

Cells form tissues,

tissues form organs,

organs form us.

These cell divisions, by which we go from a single cell

to 100 trillion cells,

are called growth.

And growth seems like a simple thing

because when we think of it,

we typically think of someone getting taller

or, later in life, wider,

but to cells, growth isn’t simple.

Cell division is an intricate chemical dance

that’s part individual, part community-driven.

And in a neighborhood of 100 trillion cells,

some times things go wrong.

Maybe an individual cell’s set of instructions, or DNA,

gets a typo,

what we call a mutation.

Most of the time, the cell senses mistakes

and shuts itself down,

or the system detects a troublemaker

and eliminates it.

But, enough mutations can bypass the fail-safes,

driving the cell to divide recklessly.

That one rogue cell becomes two,

then four,

then eight.

At every stage, the incorrect instructions

are passed along to the cells' offspring.

Weeks, months, or years

after that one rogue cell transformed,

you might see your doctor about a lump in your breast.

Difficulty going to the bathroom could reveal

a problem in your intestine,

prostate,

or bladder.

Or, a routine blood test might count too many white cells

or elevated liver enzymes.

Your doctor delivers the bad news:

it’s cancer.

From here your strategy will depend

on where the cancer is and

how far it’s progressed.

If the tumor is slow-growing and in one place,

surgery might be all you need, if anything.

If the tumor is fast-growing or invading nearby tissue,

your doctor might recommend radiation

or surgery followed by radiation.

If the cancer has spread,

or if it’s inherently everywhere like a leukemia,

your doctor will most likely recommend chemotherapy

or a combination of radiation and chemo.

Radiation and most forms of chemo work

by physically shredding the cells' DNA

or disrupting the copying machinery.

But neither radiation nor chemotherapeutic drugs target only cancer cells.

Radiation hits whatever you point it at,

and your blood stream carries chemo-therapeutics

all over your body.

So, what happens when different cells get hit?

Let’s look at a healthy liver cell,

a healthy hair cell,

and a cancerous cell.

The healthy liver cell divides only when it is stressed;

the healthy hair cell divides frequently;

and the cancer cell divides even more frequently and recklessly.

When you take a chemotherapeutic drug,

it will hit all of these cells.

And remember that the drugs work typically by disrupting cell division.

So, every time a cell divides,

it opens itself up to attack,

and that means the more frequently a cell divides,

the more likely the drug is to kill it.

So, remember that hair cell?

It divides frequently and isn’t a threat.

And, there are other frequently dividing cells in your body

like skin cells, gut cells, and blood cells.

So the list of unpleasant side effects of cancer treatment

parallels these tissue types:

hair loss,

skin rashes,

nausea,

vomiting,

fatigue,

weight loss,

and pain.

That makes sense because these are the cells that get hit the hardest.

So, in the end, it is all about growth.

Cancer hijacks cells' natural division machinery

and forces them to put the pedal to the metal,

growing rapidly and recklessly.

But, using chemotherapeutic drugs,

we take advantage of that aggressiveness,

and we turn cancer’s main strength

into a weakness.

译者:Andrea McDonough
审稿人:Bedirhan Cinar

我们都从一个单细胞开始生活。

然后那个细胞分裂,我们是两个细胞,

然后是四个,

然后是八个。

细胞形成组织,

组织形成器官,

器官形成我们。

我们从单个细胞

到 100 万亿个细胞的

这些细胞分裂称为生长。

增长似乎是一件简单的事情,

因为当我们想到它时,

我们通常会想到有人变得更高,

或者在以后的生活中变得更宽,

但对于细胞来说,增长并不简单。

细胞分裂是一种复杂的化学舞蹈

,部分是个体的,部分是社区驱动的。

在 100 万亿个细胞附近,

有时会出现问题。

也许单个细胞的指令集或 DNA

有错别字,

我们称之为突变。

大多数情况下,细胞感知错误

并自行关闭,

或者系统检测到麻烦制造者

并将其消除。

但是,足够多的突变可以绕过故障保险,

驱动细胞肆无忌惮地分裂。

一个流氓细胞变成了两个,

然后是四个,

然后是八个。

在每个阶段,错误的指令

都会传递给细胞的后代。 在一个流氓细胞转化后的

数周、数月或数年

您可能会因乳房肿块而去看医生。

上厕所困难可能表明

您的肠道、

前列腺

或膀胱有问题。

或者,常规血液检查可能会计数过多的白细胞

或升高的肝酶。

你的医生传达了一个坏消息:

它是癌症。

从这里开始,您的策略将

取决于癌症的位置

和进展程度。

如果肿瘤生长缓慢并且在一个地方,

手术可能就是你所需要的,如果有的话。

如果肿瘤快速生长或侵入附近组织,

您的医生可能会建议放疗

或手术后放疗。

如果癌症已经扩散,

或者如果它本质上像白血病一样无处不在,

您的医生很可能会推荐化疗

或放疗和化疗的组合。

辐射和大多数形式的化学疗法

通过物理切碎细胞的 DNA

或破坏复制机制来发挥作用。

但无论是放射药物还是化疗药物都不是只针对癌细胞。

辐射会击中你指向的任何地方

,你的血流会将化疗药物

输送到全身。

那么,当不同的细胞被击中时会发生什么?

让我们看看健康的肝细胞

、健康的毛细胞

和癌细胞。

健康的肝细胞只有在受到压力时才会分裂;

健康的毛细胞经常分裂;

癌细胞分裂得更加频繁和鲁莽。

当你服用一种化疗药物时,

它会攻击所有这些细胞。

请记住,这些药物通常通过破坏细胞分裂起作用。

因此,每次细胞分裂时,

它都会打开自身进行攻击

,这意味着细胞分裂越频繁

,药物就越有可能杀死它。

那么,还记得那个毛细胞吗?

它经常分裂并且不是威胁。

而且,您体内还有其他经常分裂的细胞,

如皮肤细胞、肠道细胞和血细胞。

因此,癌症治疗令人不快的副作用列表

与这些组织类型相似:

脱发、

皮疹、

恶心、

呕吐、

疲劳、

体重减轻

和疼痛。

这是有道理的,因为这些细胞是受到最严重打击的细胞。

所以,归根结底,一切都与增长有关。

癌症劫持了细胞的自然分裂机制

,迫使它们脚踏实地,

迅速而鲁莽地生长。

但是,使用化疗药物,

我们利用了这种攻击性

,我们将癌症的主要优势

变成了弱点。