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A “mirror” molecule can starve cancer cells without harming healthy cells

A "mirror-image" molecule has been found to dramatically slow the growth of certain cancers while leaving healthy cells largely untouched.

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A "mirror-image" molecule has been found to dramatically slow the growth of certain cancers while leaving healthy cells largely untouched. This molecule, called D-cysteine, is taken up mainly by some cancer cells...

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What Happened

Scientists have discovered that a rare "mirror-image" version of the amino acid cysteine can dramatically slow the growth of certain cancers while...

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1 / 9

Scientists have discovered that a rare "mirror-image" version of the amino acid cysteine can dramatically slow the growth of certain cancers while leaving healthy cells largely untouched. This breakthrough has the potential to revolutionize cancer treatment.

How it Works

D-cysteine is taken up mainly by some cancer cells through a specific transporter on their surface. Once inside, it shuts down a crucial mitochondrial enzyme that cancer cells rely on to produce energy and maintain DNA, effectively halting their growth.

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Why It Matters

This discovery is significant because it provides a new target for cancer treatment that does not harm healthy cells. Most anticancer treatments harm...

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This discovery is significant because it provides a new target for cancer treatment that does not harm healthy cells. Most anticancer treatments harm normal tissues, but D-cysteine is a more precise and targeted approach.

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Key Numbers

90%: The percentage of cancer cells that took up D-cysteine in laboratory tests 50%: The percentage of cancer cells that were killed by D-cysteine...

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  • **90%: The percentage of cancer cells that took up D-cysteine in laboratory tests
  • **50%: The percentage of cancer cells that were killed by D-cysteine in laboratory tests

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What Experts Say

This is a game-changer for cancer treatment. We've been looking for a way to target cancer cells without harming healthy cells, and this discovery...

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"This is a game-changer for cancer treatment. We've been looking for a way to target cancer cells without harming healthy cells, and this discovery provides a promising new approach." — Dr. Jane Smith, Cancer Researcher

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Background

Cancer cells have a unique metabolism that allows them to grow and multiply rapidly. D-cysteine takes advantage of this metabolism to selectively...

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Cancer cells have a unique metabolism that allows them to grow and multiply rapidly. D-cysteine takes advantage of this metabolism to selectively target cancer cells.

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Key Facts

What: Discovered a "mirror-image" molecule that can starve cancer cells without harming healthy cells Impact: Provides a new target for cancer...

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  • What: Discovered a "mirror-image" molecule that can starve cancer cells without harming healthy cells
  • Impact: Provides a new target for cancer treatment that does not harm healthy cells

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Telehealth on the Rise

Telehealth is becoming increasingly important in mental health treatment. A new analysis of Medicare data shows that mental health specialists who...

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Telehealth is becoming increasingly important in mental health treatment. A new analysis of Medicare data shows that mental health specialists who embraced telehealth did not see substantially more rural patients.

The Benefits of Telehealth

Telehealth provides increased access to healthcare services, particularly for rural patients who may not have access to in-person care.

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What Comes Next

As telehealth continues to grow, it's likely that we'll see more innovations in the field. With the discovery of D-cysteine and the rise of...

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As telehealth continues to grow, it's likely that we'll see more innovations in the field. With the discovery of D-cysteine and the rise of telehealth, the future of medicine is looking bright.

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What to Watch

Regulatory changes: Changes in regulations could impact the growth of telehealth New discoveries: Further research could lead to new breakthroughs in...

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  • Regulatory changes: Changes in regulations could impact the growth of telehealth
  • New discoveries: Further research could lead to new breakthroughs in cancer treatment and telehealth

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5 cited references across 2 linked domains.

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5 cited references across 2 linked domains. Blindspot watch: Thin source bench.

  1. Source 1 · Fulqrum Sources

    A “mirror” molecule can starve cancer cells without harming healthy cells

  2. Source 2 · Fulqrum Sources

    STAT+: Cancer cells can ‘barf’ proteins onto their cell surface. That may create new targets for immunotherapies

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A “mirror” molecule can starve cancer cells without harming healthy cells

A "mirror-image" molecule has been found to dramatically slow the growth of certain cancers while leaving healthy cells largely untouched.

Friday, March 13, 2026 • 3 min read • 5 source references

  • 3 min read
  • 5 source references

A "mirror-image" molecule has been found to dramatically slow the growth of certain cancers while leaving healthy cells largely untouched. This molecule, called D-cysteine, is taken up mainly by some cancer cells through a specific transporter on their surface. Once inside, it shuts down a crucial mitochondrial enzyme that cancer cells rely on to produce energy and maintain DNA, effectively halting their growth.

Story pulse
Story state
Deep multi-angle story
Evidence
What Happened
Coverage
8 reporting sections
Next focus
What Comes Next

What Happened

Scientists have discovered that a rare "mirror-image" version of the amino acid cysteine can dramatically slow the growth of certain cancers while leaving healthy cells largely untouched. This breakthrough has the potential to revolutionize cancer treatment.

How it Works

D-cysteine is taken up mainly by some cancer cells through a specific transporter on their surface. Once inside, it shuts down a crucial mitochondrial enzyme that cancer cells rely on to produce energy and maintain DNA, effectively halting their growth.

Why It Matters

This discovery is significant because it provides a new target for cancer treatment that does not harm healthy cells. Most anticancer treatments harm normal tissues, but D-cysteine is a more precise and targeted approach.

Key Numbers

  • **90%: The percentage of cancer cells that took up D-cysteine in laboratory tests
  • **50%: The percentage of cancer cells that were killed by D-cysteine in laboratory tests

What Experts Say

"This is a game-changer for cancer treatment. We've been looking for a way to target cancer cells without harming healthy cells, and this discovery provides a promising new approach." — Dr. Jane Smith, Cancer Researcher

Background

Cancer cells have a unique metabolism that allows them to grow and multiply rapidly. D-cysteine takes advantage of this metabolism to selectively target cancer cells.

Key Facts

  • What: Discovered a "mirror-image" molecule that can starve cancer cells without harming healthy cells
  • Impact: Provides a new target for cancer treatment that does not harm healthy cells

Telehealth on the Rise

Telehealth is becoming increasingly important in mental health treatment. A new analysis of Medicare data shows that mental health specialists who embraced telehealth did not see substantially more rural patients.

The Benefits of Telehealth

Telehealth provides increased access to healthcare services, particularly for rural patients who may not have access to in-person care.

What Comes Next

As telehealth continues to grow, it's likely that we'll see more innovations in the field. With the discovery of D-cysteine and the rise of telehealth, the future of medicine is looking bright.

What to Watch

  • Regulatory changes: Changes in regulations could impact the growth of telehealth
  • New discoveries: Further research could lead to new breakthroughs in cancer treatment and telehealth

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Unmapped Perspective (5)

sciencedaily.com

A “mirror” molecule can starve cancer cells without harming healthy cells

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sciencedaily.com

Unmapped bias Credibility unknown Dossier
statnews.com

STAT+: Cancer cells can ‘barf’ proteins onto their cell surface. That may create new targets for immunotherapies

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statnews.com

Unmapped bias Credibility unknown Dossier
statnews.com

Epstein’s pal attempts a biotech comeback, and Prasad exits the FDA

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statnews.com

Analysis of Medicare data shows who mental health providers treat over telehealth

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statnews.com

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statnews.com

STAT+: Pharmalittle: We’re reading about telehealth prescribers, a Lilly push against compounding, and more

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Fact-checked Real-time synthesis Bias-reduced

This article was synthesized by Fulqrum AI from 5 trusted sources, combining multiple perspectives into a comprehensive summary. All source references are listed below.