Small interfering RNA molecules can kill cancer cells by inhibiting the expression of oncogenes which give the cancer cells their cancerous properties.
No. Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins. They're not cytotoxic, which is what they'd need to be to kill cancer cells.
cancer is defined as the numerous growth of harmful cells.so they kill the remaining healthy protecting cells,in this way they kill most of them.they even stop the reproduction of new cells and kill them if they reproduce.
Because they attack the cells in the body and cancer cells are just the mutated cell of our body very good question by the way
coz mabaho kah
they multiply out of control and kill lots of people every year.
killler t cells kill them
Cancer kills an organism by destroying the red blood cells.
I heard that peaches and plums can kill breast cancer cells :)
Samarium doesn't kill cancer cells. A radioactive isotope of samarium (samarium-153) is used in a chemotherapy agent, but it's the radiation, not the samarium, that kills the cancer cells.
Yes
Yes
No. Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins. They're not cytotoxic, which is what they'd need to be to kill cancer cells.
It is the inserting of a virus that is capable to kill the cancer cells. This virus does not kill the healthy cells.
Californium
no
chemotherapy
cancer is defined as the numerous growth of harmful cells.so they kill the remaining healthy protecting cells,in this way they kill most of them.they even stop the reproduction of new cells and kill them if they reproduce.