Squeezing malignant breast cancer cells stops them from spreading, returning them to a healthy state, new research reveals.
This is the first time it's been found that mechanical forces alone can revert and stop growth of cancer cells, Medical Daily reports.
Scientists found transformation can happen even if the genetic mutations for the cancer remain, setting up a fight between nature and nurture to determine the fate of the cell.
The latest findings were presented at the annual meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology in San Francisco. Scientists said "tissue organisation is sensitive to mechanical imputs from the environment" during the beginning stage of a cell's growth and development.
"An early signal, in the form of compression, appears to get these malignant cells back on the right track," said Professor Daniel Fletcher, a researcher from UC Berkeley.