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12 Feb

P53 genes and cancer

Carolyn Merchant Blog 0 0

The newspaper today had another article relating to cancer, which emphasizes the narrow focus in medical research that is impairing important discoveries in chronic disease. UCSD offered research showing alterations in the P53 gene are responsible for development of cancer. The UCSD researchers again mentioned the Warburg effect, and presented a hypothesis that abnormalities in the P53 gene changed the metabolism of energy in the cell, decreased oxygen in the cell, and increased consumption of sugar, which is characteristic of cancer, i.e. the Warburg effect.

Once again a narrow focus by specialists, and refusal to accept or investigate infectious causes of chronic disease is impairing important discoveries in medicine. Breast, colorectal, liver, lung, and ovarian cancers have been associated with P53 mutations. Chlamydia suppresses the P53 gene to survive, and has been proven to impact energy metabolism in the cell. When ATP energy is depleted, chlamydia consumes sugar to survive. Chlamydia destroys normal apoptosis, creating infinite replication of weaker infected cells. Genes are impacted and changed by immortal chlamydia infections. Researchers failed to consider an infectious cause for the P53 mutation and the development of cancer.


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Written by Carolyn Merchant

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