C
Carlo M. Croce
Researcher at Ohio State University
Publications - 1156
Citations - 199822
Carlo M. Croce is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: microRNA & Cancer. The author has an hindex of 198, co-authored 1135 publications receiving 189007 citations. Previous affiliations of Carlo M. Croce include University of Nebraska Medical Center & University of California, Los Angeles.
Papers
More filters
Journal Article
Role of TCL1 and ALL1 in Human Leukemias and Development
TL;DR: A gene, ALL1, that can fuse to many different genes in acute leukemias, is identified and it is proposed that the ALL1 fusion genes may act by a dominant negative mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI
Integration of metabolomics, transcriptomics, and microRNA expression profiling reveals a miR-143-HK2-glucose network underlying zinc-deficiency-associated esophageal neoplasia.
Louise Y.Y. Fong,Ruiyan Jing,Karl J. Smalley,Cristian Taccioli,Johannes F. Fahrmann,Dinesh Kumar Barupal,Hansjuerg Alder,John L. Farber,Oliver Fiehn,Oliver Fiehn,Carlo M. Croce +10 more
TL;DR: To sustain uncontrolled cell proliferation, Zn-deficiency reprograms glucose metabolism by modulating expression of miR-143 and its target HK2, an enzyme that catalyzes the first step of glycolysis and is overexpressed in cancer cells.
Journal ArticleDOI
Detecting and Characterizing A-To-I microRNA Editing in Cancer.
Gioacchino P. Marceca,Luisa Tomasello,Rosario Distefano,Mario Acunzo,Carlo M. Croce,Giovanni Nigita +5 more
TL;DR: Adenosine to inosine (A-to-I) editing as mentioned in this paper is an RNA modification where single adenosines along the RNA sequence are converted into inosines such a biochemical transformation is catalyzed by enzymes belonging to the family of adenosine deaminases acting on RNA.
BookDOI
The Biology of Tumors
Enrico Mihich,Carlo M. Croce +1 more
TL;DR: The Role for ink4a in Melanoma Pathogenesis: One Gene, Two Products, Multiple Pathways, and the Possible Role of the Endothelium is examined.
Journal ArticleDOI
Expression of the teratocarcinoma phenotype in hybrids between totipotent mouse teratocarcinoma and myeloma cells.
TL;DR: Somatic cell hybrids between totipotent mouse teratocarcinoma and myeloma cells are produced and should make it possible to study the expression of already rearranged immunoglobulin genes during mouse development.