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In Alexandre Dumas's 'Man In The Iron Mask', d'Artagnan sacrifices himself to save his musketeer friends Athos, Porthos, Aramis, and his son Philippe. That scene, some argue, is a great depiction of human altruistic behaviour. But an Indian scientist at Stanford University School of Medicine has just found that altruism is far more common in Homo sapiens, and goes right down to our cells.
Dr Bikul Das, originally from Guwahati in Assam, has in a paper published this week in leading international journal 'Stem Cells' revealed that human embryonic stem cells under duress produce molecules that not only benefit themselves but also help nearby cells survive.
The path-breaking find, say doctors, might mean that in the near future such cells can be injected into cancerous tissue to generate killer cells, which will then wipe out malignant tumours.
Experts took scientist's idea lightly in 2005
Reacting to an important discovery in stem cells published in a US journal, Dr Chandan J Das, assistant professor in the radio-diagnosis department at AIIMS, Delhi, said, "Altruism in cells can mean it will be possible to treat cancer without chemotherapy. In future, altruistic stem cells may be cultured and injected into cancerous tissue for treatment."
Dr Purna Kurkure, senior paediatric oncologist at Tata Memorial Hospital, was upbeat, too. "This research will have a bearing on not just cancer research but in the overall understanding of the repair and regeneration mechanism of the human body," she said. "Altruism has been observed in bacteria, which is why bacteria are great survivors. So far, we haven't been able to beat cancer because there is a lack of complete understanding about it. Chemotherapy only targets the end cells, not the root. This research is, therefore, a major leap in the battle against cancer."
UK scientist Dr Peter W Andrews, considered one of the two gurus of embryonic stem cell research (the other being James Thompson who had first isolated human embryonic stem cells) is aware of the research and has already congratulated Das on his find.
Answering questions on email from his California home, Das told Sunday Times that the idea struck him in 2000 while he was in India on a break and working on a book on antioxidants. "There I had proposed the idea of 'cytoprotection' — how cells protect themselves from free radicals, hypoxia and radiation through molecular mechanisms. But it took me 12 years to come up with a cell model to demonstrate altruism at the cellular level," he said.
The scientist had first discussed the idea at a conference in Milan in 2005 "but the experts there laughed it off since I had no model to demonstrate the transformation process nor had any idea about the molecular mechanism of transformation. Altruism is not that easy to demonstrate. I needed hardcore evidence to convince others."
Das then worked on the subject with specialist Dr Herman Yeger at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto. He got help from Dr Rika Tsuchida (an assistant professor at Tokyo Medical and Dental Hospital) and a few students, Reza Mokhtari, Micky Tsui and Shamim Lotfi.
So how does altruism work in cells? "Darwin's theory of natural selection applies to cells, too — the fittest survive and the rest die. Stem cells, however, have an additional burden — they not only have to survive but also retain their identity of 'stemness'. The latter is a crucial task.
External factors could force stem cells to 'differentiate' and turn into nerve cells, heart cells, skin cells or any other cells. Therefore, in times of crisis, they transform to a higher degree of stemness and then secrete chemicals that not only help them but also other cells survive threat. "This is altruism," Das explained.
Altruism in our cells, finds desi doctor - The Times of India