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Kangaroos may hold key to skin cancer treatment

Tuesday, 1 December 2009
Agence France-Presse
Jumping roo

Credit: iStockphoto

SYDNEY: Kangaroos may provide the key to a potential treatment to prevent skin cancer, Australian scientists said this week.

Researchers at Melbourne University are investigating whether a DNA repair enzyme found in the iconic marsupials could provide a model for preventing DNA damage linked to many skin cancers in humans.

Dream cream

"Other research teams have proposed a 'dream cream' containing the DNA repair enzyme which you could slap on your skin after a day in the Sun," scientist Linda Feketeova said. "We are now examining whether this would be feasible by looking at the chemistry behind the DNA repair system."

Feketeova and colleague Uta Wille, who are working in collaboration with scientists at the University of Innsbruck in Austria, are investigating whether Sun-damaged human DNA can be repaired using the kangaroo model.

Using a mass spectrometer instrument, they are observing the impact the kangaroo enzyme would have on human DNA which would otherwise be irreversibly damaged by sunlight.

Excessive exposure

"We were quite surprised that the DNA's repair process also resulted in a number of chemical by-products, which have never been seen before," Wille said. "Our plan is to study these products to understand if the DNA repair enzyme could be incorporated into a safe and effective method for skin cancer prevention."

Kangaroos are not immune from skin cancer but their special repair enzyme, which is also present in some bacteria and fish, gives their skin an additional protection that humans lack. "As summer approaches, excessive exposure to the Sun's harmful UV (ultraviolet) light will see more than 400,000 Australians diagnosed with skin cancer," Feketeova said.

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