News Release

Ants can “sniff out” cancer!

Peer-Reviewed Publication

CNRS

Image 1

image: Formica fusca view more 

Credit: Paul Devienne, Laboratoire d'Ethologie Expérimentale et Comparée at Université Sorbonne Paris Nord

Cancer detection is a major public health challenge, and the methods currently available to achieve it, for example MRIs and mammograms, are often expensive and invasive. This limits their large-scale use. To bypass these constraints, alternative methods are being studied, like the use of animals’ sense of smell. A team of scientists from the CNRS, Université Sorbonne Paris Nord, Institut Curie and Inserm1 have demonstrated how a species of ants, Formica fusca, has performed in the area. After a few minutes of training, these insects, which use smell for daily tasks, were able to differentiate healthy human cells from cancerous human cells. By analysing the compounds emitted by various cells, the scientists have shown that each cell line had its own smell that could be used by the ants to detect them. The efficacy of this method must now be assessed using clinical trials on a human being but this first study shows that ants have high potential, are capable of learning very quickly, at lower cost, and are efficient. Find these results in iScience.

Note:

1 At the Laboratoire d'Ethologie Expérimentale et Comparée at Université Sorbonne Paris Nord, at the Laboratoire Cancer, Hétérogénéité, Instabilité et Plasticité (INSERM/Institut Curie), at the Institut Curie’s Stress and Cancer Laboratory, and at the Laboratoire Évolution, Génomes, Comportement et Ecologie (CNRS/IRD/Université Paris-Saclay) 

 


Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.