Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Tuesday, September 30, 2025

A new paper in the journal Nature reveals an astonishing -- and frankly unsettling -- feature of some cancer cells: the ability to physically inject mitochondria into their neighboring cells. These mitochondria are shown to reprogram the targeted cells by modulating the expression of certain genes, thus turning these victim cells into cancer-supporting cells that greatly increase the rate of tumor formation.

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More from the article ...

... This is an amazing discovery, and one that could move scientists closer to solving the inherently difficult question at the heart of all cancer research: Why the heck does cancer even exist?

Cancers ought to be less common than they are, especially metastatic cancers that migrate to colonize areas of the body that have nothing to do with their original cell type. Various sorts of environmental toxicity have been invoked over the years to explain the prevalence of cancers overall, but it should still be particularly difficult for cancerous cells to settle into the wrong organ.

And yet, we see quite a variety of such cancers in the population. It's almost like something is making it easier for cancer cells to take over seemingly unrelated areas, even though the environment ought to be inhospitable to their particular needs.

That's exactly the mechanism observed here.

Researchers accidentally stumbled upon a picture of a cancer cell connected to a neighboring cell of a different type by a thin thread of unknown origin. ...




#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-09-30 09:12 PM | Reply

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