BENGALURU: Every cancer has a survival trick. Breast cancer cells, it turns out, are particularly good at staying alive when they shouldn’t be. They carry proteins that act like a “do not die” switch, keeping the tumour growing, resisting treatment, and frustrating doctors.Now, a team of Indian scientists from Agharkar Research Institute (ARI) believes it has found a way to flip that switch off. Their weapon is invisible to the naked eye. It is a tiny particle, thousands of times smaller than a human hair, engineered to carry a molecular message into the heart of a cancer cell. Once inside, that message does something elegant and ruthless: it silences the genes that were keeping the tumour alive. Think of it less like a bomb and more like a very precise piece of interference. The cancer cell simply stops getting the instructions it needs to survive.What makes this approach stand out is how the particle finds its target. Breast cancer cells are coated with a particular protein called “MUC1” that healthy cells largely don’t have. The scientists fitted their tiny carrier with a kind of biological key that recognises MUC1, docking onto cancer cells while largely ignoring the healthy tissue around them. That selectivity matters enormously. One of the cruellest aspects of conventional chemotherapy is that it attacks the whole body in order to reach the tumour. This system is built to be far more precise.There is another clever trick buried in the design. The carrier only releases its payload once it is safely inside the cancer cell, triggered by a chemical present in tumours. It is the equivalent of a package that only opens in the right postcode.In laboratory tests, the approach worked, as per Department of Science and Technology (DST). ARI is an autonomous institute of the DST. “Tumours in mice shrank significantly. The cancer cells died. And crucially, the surrounding healthy tissue showed little damage — a result that distinguishes this from many existing treatments,” DST said.The research by Niladri Haldar, Rajkumar Samanta, Surajit Patra, Devyani Sengar, Sachin Jadhav, and Virendra Gajbhiye, published in the journal “Advanced Healthcare Materials”, is still at an early stage. There is a long road between a promising result in mice and a drug that a doctor can prescribe. But the scientists say the findings offer a blueprint for a new kind of cancer medicine, one that targets the disease at its genetic roots, rather than carpet-bombing the body and hoping for the best.For the millions of women diagnosed with breast cancer each year, that kind of precision cannot come soon enough.