Smoking gun!
new forays into the much-heard-of link between smoking and cancer has established beyond doubt that there is a definite and clear relationship between the two. Researchers from the University of Texas and Beckman Research Institute, California, working on the p53 gene, which is known to prevent proliferation of cells leading to cancer, found that a chemical, bpde, in cigarette smoke suppresses the gene's function.
The findings were published in a recent issue of Science and are the first conclusive evidence to establish the link between lung cancer and tobacco. While the tobacco industry in the us remained silent over the new discovery, scientists were enthused. Declared Bert Vogelstein from the Johns Hopkins Oncology Centre in Baltimore, "It puts a very firm nail in this coffin.' John Banzhaf, professor of law at Georgetown University, Washington dc , believed that the research could have profound consequences both in the courtroom and in everyday life. Tobacco manufacturers have until now got away from lawsuits which blamed them for illness, for want of hard evidence.
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