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Talks

The Betty Behrens Seminar on Classics of Historiography

Paul Seaward on "The History of the Rebellion" by Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon

Cancer: when friends become foes, and how to make them friends again

Mon 28 October 2019

Department of Chemistry

Lecture by Professor Gerard Evan FRS FMedSci, Sir William Dunn Professor of Biochemistry, Department of Biochemistry.

Cancer affects almost 1 in 2 persons worldwide, making it a devastatingly common disease. Each cancer arises from an individual cell, of which there are some hundred thousand billion in each human. While cancer is a common disease, it is nonetheless a vanishingly rare phenomenon. Since cancers arise by random mutation in affected cells, every cancer is different from every other. As random mutation continues during cancer development and progression, it is possible that every cancer cell in every cancer in every patient is unique. Modern genomic technologies have confirmed these facts and exposed cancer as a bewilderingly and endlessly complex and diverse. How can we possibly understand, let alone treat, such a protean disease? I will present evidence that this apparent complexity may be a distraction. Despite their many differences, cancers are remarkably similar to each other and share remarkably common underlying features and mechanisms. The clue to understanding these mechanisms comes from an appreciation that cancers are aberrant versions of normal processes that serve to maintain and protect us during our lives. These “friends” only become our “enemies” when they are hacked by cancer-causing mutations. It even seems that cancers carry within them mechanisms to reverse themselves, perhaps opening up an entirely novel approach to cancer treatment.

Cost: Free

Enquiries and booking

No need to book.

Open to all who are interested, no booking required. Entrance is free to all our Cambridge Philosophical Society Lectures. For further information please contact the Executive Secretary or visit the Society's website

Enquiries: Beverley Larner Website Email: philosoc@hermes.cam.ac.uk Telephone: 01223 334743

Timing

All times

Mon 28 October 2019 6:00PM - 7:00PM

Venue

Entrance to the lecture theatre is opposite the Scott Polar Research Building, off Lensfield Road
Address: Department of Chemistry
Bristol Myers Squibb Lecture Theatre
Lensfield Road
Cambridge
Cambridgeshire
CB2 1EW
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