Acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (ALL) is a form of blood cancer that primarily affects children and young people. It involves large quantities of malignant progenitor cells building up in a person's blood instead of healthy white blood cells. This is often caused by a change in genetic material with two chromosomes fusing together to create new abnormal genes that disrupt the system controlling normal blood development. Such types of leukaemia are often extremely resistant and cannot be cured with intensive chemotherapy or stem cell transplantation. In search of new ways to tackle this problem a team of scientists from the University