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Bacteria formed in the mouth can induce colorectal cancer

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Bacteria formed in the mouth can induce colorectal cancer

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The research indicates that a type of gut bacteria found in the mouth may trigger colorectal cancer by influencing the immune response and switching on cancer genes.

August 19th, 2013 (http://www.kamagrarx.co) - The research indicates that a type of gut bacteria found in the mouth may trigger colorectal cancer by influencing the immune response and switching on cancer genes. The researchers reckon that their findings may direct to more timely and meliorated ways of diagnosing, treating, and preventing colorectal cancer.

The gut contains trillions of bacteria, immensely outnumbering our own cells. These microbe communities sustain our health by practicing our immune system and helping us digest food. But they can also cause disease. There is testimony that a misbalance between the bad and the good gut bacteria may boost colon cancer.

Colorectal cancer is the second leading cause of death from cancer. The researchers have found Fusobacteria from the mouth and they are also plentiful in tissues from colorectal cancer patients. They discovered that Fusobacteria in benign tumors can become cancerous over time. This might indicate that they redound to the early stages of tumor formation.

Fusobacteria may supply not only a new way to group or describe colon cancers but also, more momentously, a new prospect on how to target pathways to halt tumor spread and growth. Fusobacteria use a molecule that lives on the surface of the bacterial cell to stick to and then attack human colorectal cancer cells. The molecule, named as Fusobacterium adhesin A (FadA), switches on genes that impulse cancer growth, causes inflammation in the human cancer cells, and impulses tumor formation.

The team also found that tissue from healthy individuals had much lower levels of FadA than tissue from patients with benign and cancerous colorectal tumors. The team also disclosed that tissue from healthy individuals had much lower levels of FadA than tissue from patients with benign and cancerous colorectal tumors.

For more please visit : http://www.kamagrarx.co/

Kamagrarx 100 Railway Street, Sydney, NSW, AUSTRALIA-2766

Andy decosta completed his graduation in Biotechnology and also did PhD in Bio-pharmacology. He works as a medical consultant for kamagrarx.co
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Bacteria formed in the mouth can induce colorectal cancer The research indicates that a type of gut bacteria found in the mouth may trigger colorectal cancer by influencing the immune response and switching on cancer genes.

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