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Canine cancer found transmissible

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http://www.sciencedaily.com/upi/index.php?feed=Science & article=UPI-1-20060811-10\

321800-bc-britain-caninecancer.xml

 

 

 

Canine cancer found transmissible

 

LONDON, Aug. 11 (UPI) -- Scientists in England have discovered that

when it comes to man's best friend, the age-old wisdom that you can't

catch cancer isn't true.

 

A canine cancer known as Sticker's sarcoma is spread by tumor cells

getting passed from dog to dog through sex or from licking or biting,

the Washington Post reports.

 

Robin Weiss of University College London led a study that found

Sticker's tumor cells behave like a parasite, leaping from one victim

to the next.

 

Because the cancer is generally not fatal, the study concludes that

today's worldwide distribution of Sticker's tumors represents a single

colony of cancer cells that may be the longest in the world.

 

In establishing their findings, Weiss and his colleagues did genetic

studies on tumor cells from 40 dogs residing on five different continents.

 

In each case, the tumor cells were not genetically related to the dogs

they came from, proving that they did not originate from the dogs' own

cells as cancer normally does.

 

In Tasmania, experts say a different transmissable cancer is

threatening Tasmanian devils with extinction.

 

Copyright 2006 by United Press International. .

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