Yesterday was a good day to play the New Yorker’s “Name Drop” quiz. The first two clues were obscure but suggestive – but any one of the last four would bave been a dead giveaway to me. So I would think that at least one of them would be a dead giveaway to anyone in my generation. Oddly, my cartoon today is a clue of a sort as well. I doubt whether the author knew that – if he had, he might have rescheduled it a day. (And p.S. – first new Randy Rainbow in 5 months in today’s video thread!)
Cartoon –
Short Takes –
The New Yorker – When an Anti-Abortion Activist Calls
Quote – I asked for her phone number and said I would call her right back. I dialled the number, and reached a recorded message from a movie theatre. Then I called my doctor, and he told me that anti-abortion groups pay nurses for lists of women who have had abortions, the same way diaper companies used to pay nurses for lists of women who had given birth. Click through for story. This is a reprint. It’s from 45 years ago. But it could easily have happened yeaterday. And it’s as infuriating, to me at least, as if it did.
Wonkette – How Are We Flaunting Our ‘Qualified Immunity’ Today?
Quote – Scott County immediately and grossly retaliated with an investigation into the molested boy’s parents. Just three months after the boy’s father threatened a lawsuit, a Missouri Department of Social Services manager, Spring Cook (no apparent relation to Brandon), showed up at the family’s home. And so began the harassment campaign…. A lawyer defended the parents pro-bono, and in August 2019, the Child Abuse and Neglect Review Board (CANRB) found that the charges of neglect were “unsubstantiated under a preponderance of the evidence standard.” The nightmare didn’t end here, though. The parents contend that Cook contacted the FBI, which led to a federal investigation into the charges that CANRB had dismissed. Click through for details – it’s ugly, but shouldn’t be ignored.
Yesterday, I received an “extra” email from Steve Schmidt’s “The Warning” on Substack. This was far from the first in this category, but I funally have to say it publicly – Steve Schmidt is a sucker for woldlife. (Of course I’m cool with that, seeing as he only shoots with cameras.) Just a couple of days ago he shared some photos of ostriches. Actually, Heather Cox Richardson, Joyce Vance,and Robert Reich also use pictures, and it’s anyone’s guess what they’ll be of. Even as an unpaid, I get a feeling of getting to know them as human beings, just just as experts.
Cartoon – 23 Blackwell RTL
Short Takes –
Military dot com – 3 Active-Duty Marines Who Work in Intelligence Arrested for Alleged Participation in Jan. 6 Riot
Quote – The three Marines now join the other nine service members — active, reserve and National Guard — who have been arrested for alleged crimes stemming from Jan. 6. Two other men were booted from basic training as their investigations unfolded. According to the George Washington University’s Project on Extremism, out of the 940 defendants charged with crimes stemming from Jan. 6, 118, or 12%, have some form of military background. Click through for story. Of course the concern here is who, if anyone, besides their superiors, has been getting information from them?
Snopes, via MSN – Was Nearly 25% of the US National Debt Incurred During Trump Administration?
Quote – An estimated $3.7 trillion of added debt during the Trump administration can be attributed to Covid-19 relief measures passed with bipartisan support. A series of tax cuts passed during the Trump administration has also added significantly to the national debt. Because the $7.8 trillion increase in the national debt incurred during the Trump Administration represents nearly 25% of the current $31 trillion national debt, the claim is “True.” Click through for details. The answer to the question as asked is “yes.” Period. There are a few details sometimes added to the question which are shakier, but don’t get distracted. Republicans simply do not want to pay their own bills.
Experts in autocracies have pointed out that it is, unfortunately, easy to slip into normalizing the tyrant, hence it is important to hang on to outrage. These incidents which seem to call for the efforts of the Greek Furies (Erinyes) to come and deal with them will, I hope, help with that. As a reminder, though no one really knows how many there were supposed to be, the three names we have are Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone. These roughly translate as “unceasing,” “grudging,” and “vengeful destruction.”
The number – and the names – we have lost to pancreatic cancer in the last couple od decades is staggering. Mercifully, I can’t offhand remember many of the names besides Alex Trebek, but I also cannot get over the “Oh my god, no not again” feeling when I see the words next to someone’s name. With this article I have a better idea of why, and maybe even a little hope.
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Stopping the cancer cells that thrive on chemotherapy – research into how pancreatic tumors adapt to stress could lead to a new treatment approach
As with weeds in a garden, it is a challenge to fully get rid of cancer cells in the body once they arise. They have a relentless need to continuously expand, even when they are significantly cut back by therapy or surgery. Even a few cancer cells can give rise to new colonies that will eventually outgrow their borders and deplete their local resources. They also tend to wander into places where they are not welcome, creating metastatic colonies at distant sites that can be even more difficult to detect and eliminate.
One explanation for why cancer cells can withstand such inhospitable environments and growing conditions is an old adage: What doesn’t kill them makes them stronger.
At the very earliest stage of tumor formation, even before cancer can be diagnosed, individual cancer cells typically find themselves in an environment lacking nutrients, oxygen or adhesive proteins that help them attach to an area of the body to grow. While most cancer cells will quickly die when faced with such inhospitable conditions, a small percentage can adapt and gain the ability to initiate a tumor colony that will eventually become malignant disease.
Weareresearchers studying how these microenvironmental stresses affect tumor initiation and progression. In our new study, we found that the harsh microenvironments of the body can push certain cancer cells to overcome the stress of being isolated and make them more adept at initiating and forming new tumor colonies. Moreover, these cancer cells may adapt even better in the inhospitable and stressful conditions they encounter while trying to establish metastases in other areas of the body or after they are challenged by treatment with chemotherapy or surgery.
Cancer cells overcoming isolation stress
We focused on pancreatic cancer,
one of the most lethal cancers and one that is notoriously resistant to chemotherapy and often not curable with surgery. Almost 90% of pancreatic patients will succumb to cancer recurrence or metastasis within five years after diagnosis.
We wanted to study how tumor formation is affected by what we call “isolation stress,” when cells are deprived of nutrients or oxygen supply because of poor blood vessel formation or because they cannot benefit from making contact with nearby cancer cells. To study how cancer cells respond to these situations, we recreated different forms of isolation stress in cell cultures, in mice and in patient samples by depriving them of oxygen and nutrients or by exposing them to chemotherapeutic drugs. We then measured which genes were turned on or off in pancreatic cancer cells.
We found that pancreatic cancer cells challenged with conditions that mimic isolation stress gain a new receptor on their surface that unstressed cancer cells don’t typically have: lysophosphatidic acid receptor 4, or LPAR4, a protein involved in tumor progression.
When we forced the cancer cells to produce LPAR4 on their surfaces, we found that they were able to form new tumor colonies two to eight times faster than average cancer cells under isolation stress conditions. Also, preventing cancer cells from gaining LPAR4 when they were stressed reduced their ability to form tumor colonies by 80% to 95%. These findings suggest that the ability of cancer cells to gain LPAR4 when they are exposed to stress is both necessary and sufficient to promote tumor initiation.
How does LPAR4 help build tumors?
We also found that LPAR4 helps cancer cells achieve tumor initiation by giving them the ability to produce a web of macromolecules, or an extracellular matrix network, that provides them an adhesive foothold within an otherwise inhospitable environment. By producing a halo of their own matrix, cancer cells with LPAR4 can start building their own tumor-supporting niche that provides a refuge from isolation stresses.
We determined that a key component of this extracellular matrix is fibronectin. When this protein binds to receptors called integrins on the surface of cells, it triggers a cascade of events that results in the expression of new genes promoting tumor initiation, stress tolerance and cancer progression. Eventually, other cancer cells are recruited into the fibronectin-rich matrix network, and a new satellite tumor colony starts to form.
Considering that tumor cells with LPAR4 can create their own tumor-supporting matrix on the fly, this suggests that LPAR4 may allow individual tumor cells to overcome isolation stress conditions and survive in the bloodstream, the lymphatic system involved in immune responses or distant organs as metastases.
Importantly, we found that isolation stress is not the only way to trigger LPAR4. Exposing pancreatic cancer cells to chemotherapy drugs, which are designed to impose stress upon cancer cells, also triggers an increase of LPAR4 on cancer cells. This finding might explain how such tumor cells could develop drug resistance.
Keeping cancer cells stressed
Understanding how to cut off the cascade of events that allows cancer cells to become stress-tolerant is important, because it provides a new area to explore for future treatments.
Our team is currently considering potential strategies to prevent cancer cells from utilizing the fibronectin matrix to gain stress tolerance, including drugs that can target the receptors that bind to fibronectin on the surface of tumor cells. One of these drugs, being developed by a company one of us co-founded, is poised to enter clinical trials soon. Other strategies include preventing cancer cells from gaining LPAR4 when they sense stress, or interfering with the signals that promote the generation of the fibronectin matrix.
For patients diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, there is a pressing need to discover how to improve the effectiveness of surgery or chemotherapy. Like combating weeds in your garden, this may require attacking the problem from multiple directions at once.
============================================================== Alecto, Megaera, and Tisiphone, this is what is meant by “survival of the fittest.” Pancreatic cancer is a survivor because it is so adaptable – it treats chemo the way Mithridates (at least according to legend) treated poison. It is also a dreadful scourge. Unfortunately, the two qualities are not incompatible. If you have any tips to give the scientists working on this, the whole world will deeply appreciate it.
Political Voices Network – Neal Katyal & Andrew Weissmann: Trump’s Political Fate May Have Been Decided…
Thom Hartmann – Will Long COVID Make America Poor?
MSNBC – Alec Baldwin and ‘Rust’ armorer to be charged with involuntary manslaughter in film set shooting (“Involuntary manslaughter” means different things in different states. In New Mexico it’s pretty minimal.)
Ring of Fire – Rudy Giuliani Somehow Keeps Getting Dumber
Stray Cat Waits At Guy’s Window Until He’s Adopted
Beau – Let’s talk about China, the US, the economy, and American exceptionalism….
Yesterday, the radio opera was L’Elisir d’Amore by Donizetti. If I remember correctly, that was included in the summer lineup, I think from China, and I think I remember it was an American Old West setting – cowboys and a snake oil salesman and recruiting for the Civil War. So there’s not much to add. I can mention that the characters are straight out of the Italian Commedia dell’Arte and that their names are part of the humor – “Nemorino” means “little nobody,” Sergeant “Belcore” means “beautiful heart” (that would be only on his own mind, as his character is the “braggart soldier,”) and Dr. “Dulcamara” means “bittersweet.” Commedia dell’Arte heroines were spared from this, so Adina is just Adina. The one thing that has always bugged me about this ooera, although it’s necessary to the plot – wouldn’t you think of a love potion as something you’d give to the object of your affections to change his or her feelings? That’s certainly how it works in “Tristan und Isolde,” and in Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” and just about everywhere else. But in this, Nemorino drinks the potion himself to make Adina fall in love with him. Somehow it works. Also (via Heather Cox Richardson), Representative Bill Foster (D-IL), an award-winning physicist with real credentials, tweeted a welcome to the Science Committee to George Santos as a “Nobel prize winner” who also received a math prize “for his groundbreaking work with “imaginary numbers.” I’m not sure that “poorly educated” MAGAts know that “imaginary numbers” are an actual thing – but even those of us who do can be sure Foster is not talking about that kind of “imaginary numbers.” And I hesitate to say the DOJ trolled Gym Jordan when all they did was explain that they cannot reveal any information on ongoing investigations, but they’ll be happy to help with crafting legislation when it’s just pure fact, but it’s going to sound like “Keep your nose out of grownup matters, little boy, and do your own job. We’ll help – you obviously need help.”
The New York Times (no paywall – The U.S. will name the Wagner mercenary group a transnational criminal organization.
Quote – The United States has decided to designate the Russian private military group Wagner as a significant transnational criminal organization, the White House said on Friday, a move that will expand the number of nations and institutions that can be prevented from doing business with the company “Our message to any company that is considering providing support to Wagner is simply this: Wagner is a criminal organization that is committing widespread human rights abuses,” John Kirby, the White House national security spokesman, told reporters at a news briefing.
Click through to one or both. The first link will demonstrate how they operate on deceit (and throw their own under the bus). The second is more about what we are trying to do about it.
Crooks & Liars – GOP Congressman Greg Steube Falls Off His Roof
Quote – You know, I’ll bet Kevin McCarthy just might start to worry about getting rid of proxy voting. Yesterday Florida congress critter Greg Steube fell off his roof and is in the hospital, which leaves Kevin with a two-vote margin. His caucus might start to get Manchin-and-Sinema-type ideas! Click through for story. From Susie Madrak’s keyboard to God’s iPhone. We’d only need to flip two. Or, I won’t wish them injuries or death, but if we could only flip one, and one could be arrested and detained long ehough, we’d have the votes to raise the debt ceiling right there. Yeah, I know, McCarthy won’t bring it to the floor. Except he might. He has already shown willingness to bring a vote to the floor without having the votes – what was it, 15 times?