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How Artificial Intelligence Found the Words To Kill Cancer Cells

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Cancer is a disease characterized by the abnormal growth and division of cells in the body. Tumors can affect any part of the body and can be benign (non-cancerous) or malignant (cancerous), spreading to other parts of the body through the bloodstream or lymph system. Scientists at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and IBM Research have created a virtual library of thousands of "command sentences" for cells using machine learning. These "sentences" are based on combinations of "words" that direct engineered immune cells to find and continuously eliminate cancer cells. This research, which was recently published in the journal Science, is the first time that advanced computational techniques have been applied to a field that has traditionally progressed through trial-and-error experimentation and the use of pre-existing molecules rather than synthetic ones to engineer cells.


How AI found the words to kill cancer cells -- ScienceDaily

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Using new machine learning techniques, researchers at UC San Francisco (UCSF), in collaboration with a team at IBM Research, have developed a virtual molecular library of thousands of "command sentences" for cells, based on combinations of "words" that guided engineered immune cells to seek out and tirelessly kill cancer cells. The work, published online Dec. 8, 2022, in Science, represents the first time such sophisticated computational approaches have been applied to a field that, until now, has progressed largely through ad hoc tinkering and engineering cells with existing, rather than synthesized, molecules. The advance allows scientists to predict which elements -- natural or synthesized -- they should include in a cell to give it the precise behaviors required to respond effectively to complex diseases. "This is a vital shift for the field," said Wendell Lim, PhD, the Byers Distinguished Professor of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, who directs the UCSF Cell Design Institute and led the study. "Only by having that power of prediction can we get to a place where we can rapidly design new cellular therapies that carry out the desired activities."


How AI found the words to kill cancer cells

#artificialintelligence

Using new machine learning techniques, researchers at UC San Francisco (UCSF), in collaboration with a team at IBM Research, have developed a virtual molecular library of thousands of "command sentences" for cells, based on combinations of "words" that guided engineered immune cells to seek out and tirelessly kill cancer cells. The work, published online Dec. 8, 2022, in Science, represents the first time such sophisticated computational approaches have been applied to a field that until now has progressed largely through ad hoc tinkering and engineering cells with existing--rather than synthesized--molecules. The advance allows scientists to predict which elements--natural or synthesized--they should include in a cell to give it the precise behaviors required to respond effectively to complex diseases. "This is a vital shift for the field," said Wendell Lim, Ph.D., the Byers Distinguished Professor of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, who directs the UCSF Cell Design Institute and led the study. "Only by having that power of prediction can we get to a place where we can rapidly design new cellular therapies that carry out the desired activities."


These tiny robots can kill cancer cells

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They are now experimenting on micro-organisms and small fish, before moving on to rodents. Clinical trials in humans are expected to follow and it is hoped that the results may have the potential to save millions of lives.