Institution
Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer and Allied Diseases
About: Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer and Allied Diseases is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Pancreatic cancer & Cancer. The organization has 965 authors who have published 1396 publications receiving 58994 citations.
Topics: Pancreatic cancer, Cancer, DNA, Gene, Cancer cell
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: Cellular sensitivity and ability to remove 3'-blocked ends such as 3'-phosphoglycolate from the 3'-end of DNA in vitro suggest that XPF-ERCC1 plays a role in the repair of ROS-induced DNA damage by trimming 3'- Blocked ends.
Abstract: XPF-ERCC1 is a structure-specific endonuclease that is essential for nucleotide excision repair and DNA interstrand cross-link repair in mammalian cells. The yeast counterpart of XPF-ERCC1, Rad1-Rad10, plays multiple roles in DNA repair. Rad1-Rad10 is implicated to be involved in the repair of oxidative DNA damage. To explore the role(s) of XPF-ERCC1 in the repair of DNA damage induced by reactive oxygen species (ROS), cellular sensitivity of the XPF-deficient Chinese hamster ovary cell-line UV41 to ROS was investigated. The XPF-deficient UV41 showed sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide, bleomycin and paraquat. Furthermore, XPF-ERCC1 showed an ability to remove 3’-blocked ends such as 3’-phosphoglycolate from the 3’-end of DNA in vitro. These data suggest that XPF-ERCC1 plays a role in the repair of ROS-induced DNA damage by trimming 3’-blocked ends. The accumulation of various types of DNA damage, including ROS-induced DNA damage due to defects in multiple XPF-ERCC1-mediated DNA repair pathways, could contribute to the accelerated aging phenotypes observed in an XPF-ERCC1 deficient patient.
25 citations
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TL;DR: A detailed structure–function analysis of human Polα's interaction with dNTPs and DNA templates primed with RNA, chimeric RNA–DNA, or DNA is provided and it is observed that its fidelity depends on the type of sugar at the primer 3′-end.
25 citations
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TL;DR: It is suggested that Jak2 plays a central role in the causation of Ang II-induced neointima formation following vascular injury and may provide a novel target for the prevention of neointedima formation.
25 citations
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TL;DR: Asojo et al. as discussed by the authors corrected the data collection and instrument information reported in the article by Asojo, et al., 2005, Acta Cryst. F61, 391-394.
Abstract: Data collection and instrument information reported in the article by Asojo et al. [(2005), Acta Cryst. F61, 391–394] are corrected.
25 citations
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TL;DR: The results show that genetic predisposition for familial breast cancer can be rich in an affected family, but the predisposition can be family‐specific and it will be difficult to detect them by applying population‐based approach.
Abstract: Genetic predisposition plays a key role in the development of familial breast cancer. In spite of strong familial clustering of the disease and extensive efforts made during the past decade; however, progress has been slow in identifying genetic predisposition for the majority of familial breast cancer families. The question arises therefore as to whether current approaches are adequate in identifying the unknown genetic predisposition. We analyzed eight members of a BRCA1-, BRCA2-, p53-, and PTEN-negative breast cancer family, of which five had breast cancer, one is an obligate gene carrier, and two were unaffected. We sequenced the entire coding region of the genome for each member using exome sequencing to identify nonsynonymous variants. We identified 55 nonsynonymous germline variants affecting 49 genes in multiple members of the family, of which 22 are predicted to have damaging effects. We validated 20 of the 22 selected variants in the family by Sanger sequencing. Two variants in KAT6B, an acetal transferase gene, were identified in six family members of which five were affected with breast cancer and one is the unaffected obligate carrier. We further examined the presence of the identified variants in a cohort of 40 additional breast cancer cases from 22 familial breast cancer families, but none of the 22 variants was detected in these cases. Sequencing the entire coding exons in KAT6B detects no variants in these cases. Our results show that genetic predisposition for familial breast cancer can be rich in an affected family, but the predisposition can be family-specific. As such, it will be difficult to detect them by applying population-based approach. Our study supports the concept that focusing on each affected family will be required to determine the genetic predisposition for many familial breast cancer families whose genetic dispositions remain unknown.
25 citations
Authors
Showing all 965 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Michael R. Green | 126 | 537 | 57447 |
Henrik Clausen | 109 | 520 | 49820 |
Howard E. Gendelman | 101 | 567 | 39460 |
James O. Armitage | 97 | 558 | 59171 |
Surinder K. Batra | 87 | 564 | 30653 |
Michael L. Gross | 82 | 701 | 27140 |
Michael A. Hollingsworth | 76 | 249 | 24460 |
Peter M. J. Burgers | 73 | 167 | 16123 |
Patrick L. Iversen | 68 | 319 | 13707 |
J. Alan Diehl | 67 | 168 | 19966 |
Samuel M. Cohen | 65 | 421 | 15940 |
Kenneth H. Cowan | 64 | 178 | 14094 |
Gangning Liang | 60 | 150 | 18081 |
Michael G. Brattain | 59 | 199 | 13199 |
Thomas E. Smithgall | 57 | 184 | 8904 |