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FRIDAY, Jan. 3, 2025 (HealthDay News) -- The lungs are a tempting place for cancer cells -- so much so that more than half of people with advanced cancer elsewhere in their bodies wind up with lung tumors. Researchers now think they know why.

Elevated levels of an amino acid called aspartate appear to allow cancer cells to grow more easily inside the lungs, researchers reported in a study published Jan. 1 in the journal Nature . “We found high levels of aspartate in the lungs of mice and patients with breast cancer compared to mice and patients without cancer, which suggests that aspartate may be important for lung metastasis,” lead researcher Ginevra Doglioni , a doctoral student with the Flemish Institute for Biotechnology’s Center for Cancer Biology in Belgium, said in a news release from the college.



For the study, researchers examined the genetic activity of tumor cells taken from aggressive lung cancers . They found that aspartate -- an amino acid used to make proteins in the body -- appeared to trigger gene activity that results in higher cancer aggressiveness and more risk for lung tumors. Aspartate appears in very low levels in the bloodstream, but it showed up in very high concentrations in the lungs of mice with advanced breast cancer , results show.

Researchers noted a similar process when examining human lung tumor samples, results show. Essentially, aspartate activates a surface protein on cancer cells that results in a gene signaling cascade. This cascade.

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