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ST. ANDREWS, Scotland The cheering jarred Inbee Park from her sleep.The
10-year-old went downstairs to find her father in front of the television
in the middle of the night in Seoul as he watched Se
Ri Pak become the first South Korean to win the U.S. Women's
Open.Within a week, Park wrapped her hands around a golf club for
the first time, not knowing that it one day would lead her
to the brink of history."They were doing replays every day on TV,
her hitting the shot out of the water with her socks off,"
Park said. "It was cool to see her white feet. I didn't
know what was happening, but I thought it was really cool to
be seen playing golf and being on TV. Everybody was talking about
it. Golf looked really fun."Fifteen years later, everyone is talking about
Inbee Park.A win this week in the Women's British Open
at St. Andrews, of all places would make the
25-year-old Park the first golfer to win four majors in one season.Arnold
Palmer created the modern Grand Slam, winning four professional majors in
one year. Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Annika Sorenstam got halfway home
before their pursuit of it ended. No one has ever had a
better shot at it than Park, who has won three LPGA Tour
majors this year.She is a heavy favorite when the Open begins Thursday,
just as Woods was at St. Andrews when he won to complete
the career Grand Slam in 2000. Park already has won six times
this year half of those wins at majors
and has
told FoxNews.com. (The stem
cells) can repair tissue damage caused by chemo radiotherapy, so those patients
will tolerate chemotherapy much better. It gives enough room for clinicians
to use a high dose of chemotherapy to kill cancer and
the patient can survive.Through a series of in vitro experiments, Geng and
his team analyzed cells in the GI tract, stumbling upon an important
molecule called ROBO1. They found that ROBO1 was specifically expressed
in intestinal stem cells but not in any other cells in
the body. Upon this discovery, the researchers added to the cells a
protein called SLIT2, which binds to ROBO1.The result: stem cell regeneration.Basically,
you add SLIT2, you have more intestinal stem cells, Geng explained. If
you have more intestinal stem cells, you repair more tissue damage, just
like in general cell replication. So the ability to repair damage is
higher its just the logical explanation.The researchers theorized that
by increasing stem cells in the gut, the intestine and GI tract
are better protected from the effects of chemotherapy, allowing cancer patients
to ingest nutrients and perform critical functions without releasing intestinal
toxins into the blood circulation.To test this idea, Geng experimented with
hundreds of mice with late-stage, metastatic cancer. All of the mice received
a lethal dose of chemotherapy, but only half were given SLIT2 or
an analogous protein called R-SPONDIN1 to stimulate intestinal
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