Ancient Enzyme Could Boost Power of Liquid Biopsies to Detect and Profile Cancers

November 16, 2017 • by Marc Airhart

A set of medical tests called liquid biopsies could rapidly detect the presence of cancers, infectious diseases and other conditions from only a small blood sample.

Illustration of a person's circulatory system and a sea of genetic markers

Illustration credit: Jenna Luecke


Illustration showing how liquid biopsies work

Illustration credit: Jenna Luecke.

Molecular structure of a group 2 intron reverse transcriptase

An ancient bacterial enzyme (grey) crawls along a tangled strand of RNA (orange), creating a complimentary strand of DNA (blue). Lambowitz and his team think this enzyme—called GsI-IIC RT and part of a group of enzymes known as TGIRTs—have novel properties that make it easier to detect RNA biomarkers from cancer and other disorders. Postdoctoral researcher Jennifer Stamos revealed for the first time the molecular structure of this enzyme. Illustration credit: Jennifer Stamos.

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Against a backdrop of spinach leaves are old-time news clips with headlines "U.T. Scientists Find New Vitamins in Spinach: Why Popeye Has Big Msucles" and "New 'Life Staff' Found in Spinach" and "Three U.T. Scientists Discover New Vitamin"

UT News

4 Tons of Spinach, 3 Professors and 1 Life-Changing Discovery

A montage of six young people, many in outdoor settings is surrounded by graphics of lines and squares.

UT Biodiversity Center

Announcing the 2025 Stengl-Wyer Scholars, Fellows and Grant Awardees