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Finding Genius Podcast

The Self-Victimization of Cancer Cells

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Health, Extracellularvesicles, Crisprcas9, 3dbioprinting, Medicine, Cancer, Health & Fitness, Biotech, Bioscience, Microbiome, Ketogenicdiets

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 25 April 2021

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Food poisoning, pollution, infection, radiation: cell damage is happening in our bodies on an almost continuous basis, from so many sources. If the damage doesn’t result in cell death, then the cell will adapt to the damage.

But what happens when, in the process of adapting, a cell creates its own insult, becoming a “victim of itself”?

Saverio Gentile, PhD, explains this and more, including:

  • What differs between the vascularization of tumor tissues and vascularization during normal development
  • Where the inhibition of cell proliferation comes from
  • Whether cancer is a maladaptation to chronic insult, random, or both
  • Why cancer cells which recur after chemotherapy are particularly dangerous

Gentile is a research assistant professor at the University of Illinois College of Medicine who joins the show to offer insight on a number of compelling questions about cancer, and share his research findings on the manipulation of ion channels in treating different tumors.

According to Gentile, cancer is nothing more than a normal cell that has lost control of specific parameters, like the ability to stop proliferating when a normal cell would, and the controlled use of biochemical inputs and outputs.

He explains when and how an otherwise normal cell, while trying to adapt to an insult, can actually worsen the problem, leading to additional uncontrolled and improperly regulated cellular pathways.

Once there are enough of these cells, they may form a tumor, and begin creating an environment in which their growth is favored, such as by redirecting blood vessels toward the area of the tumor. The larger the tumor, the greater the signaling for the promotion of tumor growth.

Gentile discusses the heterogeneity of tumors, three primary categories of breast cancers and how they differ in appearance, behavior, and response to therapeutics, the difference between neoplasms and cancer tumors, speculation as to why some cancers re-localize in certain areas and not others (e.g. brain versus skin), the relationship between tumors and microbiomes, the connection between viruses and cancer, and his research on ion channel manipulation in the treatment of cancer.

Tune in for all the details, and visit https://cancer.uillinois.edu/member/saverio-gentile-phd/ to learn more.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Forget frequently as questions.

0:02.0

Common sense, common knowledge, or Google.

0:05.0

How about advice from a real genius?

0:07.0

95% of people in any profession are good enough to be qualified in license.

0:11.0

5%?

0:12.0

Go above and beyond.

0:13.0

They become very good at what they do.

0:15.0

But only 0.1% are real geniuses.

0:18.0

Richard Jacobs has made his life's mission to find them for you.

0:22.0

He hunts down and interviews geniuses in every field.

0:25.0

Sleep science, cancer, stem cells, ketogenic diets, and more.

0:29.0

Come the geniuses.

0:30.0

This is the Finding Genius Podcast.

0:33.0

The Richard Jacobs.

0:36.0

Quick note before we begin.

0:39.0

The Finding Genius Foundation, as part of the Finding Genius Podcast,

0:42.0

has recently completed a book about understanding viruses.

0:46.0

So the creation of this book was to interview 100 virologists,

0:50.0

ask them a lot of deep difficult questions, take the most difficult questions,

0:54.0

and then re-interview the top 25 or so,

0:57.0

and ask them the hardest questions I could think of.

1:00.0

And we compile that all into a book.

...

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