Muon disrupts AKT hydrogen bond network in cancer |
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Authors: | Ziv Radisavljevic MD PhD |
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Affiliation: | Department of Surgery, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts |
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Abstract: | A cancer microenvironment generates strong hydrogen bond network system by the positive feedback loops supporting cancer complexity and robustness. Such network functions through the AKT locus generating high entropic energy supporting cancer metastatic robustness. Charged lepton particle muon follows the rule of Bragg effect during a collision with hydrogen network in cancer cells. Muon beam dismantles hydrogen bond network in cancer by the muon-catalyzed fusion, leading to apoptosis of cancer cells. Muon induces cumulative energy appearance on the hydrogen bond network in a cancer cell with its fast decay to an electron and two neutrinos. Thus, muon beam, muonic atom, muon neutrino shower, and electrons simultaneously cause fast neutralization of the AKT hydrogen bond network by the conversion of hydrogen into deuterium or helium, inactivating the hydrogen bond networks and inducing failure of cancer complexity and robustness with the disappearance of a malignant phenotype. |
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Keywords: | AKT locus cancer robustness and complexity hydrogen bond network muon induced fusion proton |
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