Mw. White, CANCER IS A HYBRID PRODUCED BY A RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN A PLANT BACTERIUM AND A MAMMALIAN-CELL - AN ORIGINAL CONCEPT, Medical hypotheses, 47(1), 1996, pp. 35-38
Facts presented in previously published articles (1-7) support the con
clusion that the malignant cell, although of animal origin, metabolize
s and respires anaerobically. Facts also support the conclusion that p
lant bacterial conidia (spores) derived, under duress, from one of the
several groups belonging to the Ascomycete family or from the Staphyl
ococcus aureus coagulase positive micro-organism are present intracell
ularly. It is this group of conidia, when formed, that survives as a p
rimitive oval, spheroidal type of a unicell. They are identical in all
respects to the various carbohydrate, protein, and fat molecules. Alt
hough these conidia have lost their original outside cell wall and all
their enzymes and metabolites, they survive none the less as bacteria
by retaining within their cytoplasm a genetically viable anion accept
or complex (oxidant), and their asexual procreative unit. It is this o
xidant factor that survives within a sac or cell, as long as it is fre
e of the atmospheric environment. Ultimately, with an ensuing circulat
ing but compatible flow of blood by the host, there develops an anneal
ing process whereby the genes of each species unite to form a plant-an
imal intracellular hybridization. This somatic association accounts fo
r the origin of the metabolic and respiratory anaerobiosis and also fo
r the subsequent growth and pathophysiology that occurs in those livin
g human beings suffering from the various malignant diseases.