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A Rutgers biochemistry professor explains how omega-6 fatty acids found in Western diets can activate cellular growth ...
Scientists found linoleic acid from seed oils promotes triple-negative breast cancer growth by activating a specific protein ...
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Omega-6 fatty acid promotes the growth of an aggressive type of breast cancer, study findsIn the study, published March 14 in Science, the researchers found that linoleic acid can activate a major growth pathway in ...
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Study Finds on MSNThe Fat Connection: Omega-6 and Triple-Negative Breast CancerResearch from Weill Cornell Medicine has identified a molecular pathway linking omega-6 linoleic acid—a common dietary fat in ...
Linoleic acid, an omega-6 fatty acid enhanced the growth of the hard-to-treat “triple negative” breast cancer subtype, ...
A new study led by Weill Cornell Medicine researchers has revealed that linoleic acid—an omega-6 fatty acid common in Western ...
High expression of FABP5 promotes fatty acid metabolism through lipolysis and de novo fatty acid synthesis in prostate and breast cancer cells. Activation of PKC and increase in ROS levels by ...
Linoleic acid, an omega-6 fatty acid found in seed oils such as soybean and safflower oil, and animal products including pork ...
A new study has found that a type of fat commonly found in seed oils and animal products may help a dangerous form of breast cancer grow faster. The fat, called linoleic acid, is an omega-6 fatty acid ...
Estela Jacinto, a professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, has been ...
In the study, published March 14 in Science, the researchers found that linoleic acid can activate a major growth pathway in tumor cells by binding to a protein called FABP5. Comparing breast ...
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