If I understand what you're suggesting, lipopolysaccharide doesn't make cells immortal. It just does the equivalent of making it not work when you hold down the power button to power cycle and force-shutdown your laptop. It lets your malware be free to run and send emails without danger of losing its environment.
Clarification: This is about bacteria that hide inside cells to avoid the immune system; it's about how they then prevent apoptosis of the host cell, not of themselves (which wouldn't really make sense).
Woah... I wonder if bacteria could in some cases drive certain cancers?
Something that fascinates me is just how small many bacteria are. They appear as specks on the most powerful optical microscopes, if at all. Also, a lot of bacteria simply can't be cultivated outside of the environment they are adapted to, and are as such really hard to study.
This study really reminds me of the symbiogenesis framework for thinking about eukaryotic evolution.
The focus in the last decades was mostly about genetic causes of cancer but as it happens for other diseases (see recent discussion on Alzheimer), it is now shifting to other causes. Statnews.com is a good web site to read for lay people like me, who are interested in serious medical related news.
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[ 3.6 ms ] story [ 48.6 ms ] threadThank you for posting this clarification--I was definitely a bit clickbaited by the article, but it,'s interesting nonetheless.
Something that fascinates me is just how small many bacteria are. They appear as specks on the most powerful optical microscopes, if at all. Also, a lot of bacteria simply can't be cultivated outside of the environment they are adapted to, and are as such really hard to study.
This study really reminds me of the symbiogenesis framework for thinking about eukaryotic evolution.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carcinogenic_bacteria
Very roughly, 1 cancer out of 10 has an infectious cause.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infectious_causes_of_cancer
The focus in the last decades was mostly about genetic causes of cancer but as it happens for other diseases (see recent discussion on Alzheimer), it is now shifting to other causes. Statnews.com is a good web site to read for lay people like me, who are interested in serious medical related news.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2746948/