Journal ArticleDOI
Cancer genes and the pathways they control.
TLDR
The purposes of this review are to highlight examples of progress in many areas of cancer research, indicate where knowledge is scarce and point out fertile grounds for future investigation.Abstract:
The revolution in cancer research can be summed up in a single sentence: cancer is, in essence, a genetic disease. In the last decade, many important genes responsible for the genesis of various cancers have been discovered, their mutations precisely identified, and the pathways through which they act characterized. The purposes of this review are to highlight examples of progress in these areas, indicate where knowledge is scarce and point out fertile grounds for future investigation.read more
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Normalization of Tumor Vasculature: An Emerging Concept in Antiangiogenic Therapy
TL;DR: Emerging evidence supporting an alternative hypothesis is reviewed—that certain antiangiogenic agents can also transiently “normalize” the abnormal structure and function of tumor vasculature to make it more efficient for oxygen and drug delivery.
Journal ArticleDOI
Core Signaling Pathways in Human Pancreatic Cancers Revealed by Global Genomic Analyses
Siân Jones,Xiaosong Zhang,D. Williams Parsons,D. Williams Parsons,Jimmy Lin,Rebecca J. Leary,Philipp Angenendt,Parminder Mankoo,Hannah Carter,Hirohiko Kamiyama,Antonio Jimeno,Seung-Mo Hong,Baojin Fu,Ming Tseh Lin,Eric S. Calhoun,Mihoko Kamiyama,Kimberly Walter,Tatiana Nikolskaya,Yuri Nikolsky,James Hartigan,Douglas Smith,Manuel Hidalgo,Steven D. Leach,Alison P. Klein,Elizabeth M. Jaffee,Michael Goggins,Anirban Maitra,Anirban Maitra,Christine A. Iacobuzio-Donahue,James R. Eshleman,Scott E. Kern,Ralph H. Hruban,Rachel Karchin,Nickolas Papadopoulos,Giovanni Parmigiani,Bert Vogelstein,Victor E. Velculescu,Kenneth W. Kinzler +37 more
TL;DR: It is found that pancreatic cancers contain an average of 63 genetic alterations, the majority of which are point mutations, which defined a core set of 12 cellular signaling pathways and processes that were each genetically altered in 67 to 100% of the tumors.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Emerging Hallmarks of Cancer Metabolism
TL;DR: This Perspective has organized known cancer-associated metabolic changes into six hallmarks: deregulated uptake of glucose and amino acids, use of opportunistic modes of nutrient acquisition, useof glycolysis/TCA cycle intermediates for biosynthesis and NADPH production, increased demand for nitrogen, alterations in metabolite-driven gene regulation, and metabolic interactions with the microenvironment.
PatentDOI
Consensus coding sequences of human breast and colorectal cancers
Tobias Sjöblom,Sian Jones,D. Williams Parsons,Laura D. Wood,Jimmy Lin,Thomas D. Barber,Diana Mandelker,Bert Vogelstein,Kenneth W. Kinzler,Victor E. Velculesu +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed 13,023 genes in 11 breast and 11 colorectal cancers and found that individual tumors accumulate an average of 90 mutant genes but only a subset of these contribute to the neoplastic process.
Journal ArticleDOI
Transitions between epithelial and mesenchymal states: acquisition of malignant and stem cell traits
TL;DR: Owing to the importance of these tumour-associated phenotypes in metastasis and cancer-related mortality, targeting the products of such cellular plasticity is an attractive but challenging approach that is likely to lead to improved clinical management of cancer patients.
References
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EGFR mutations in lung cancer: correlation with clinical response to gefitinib therapy.
J. Guillermo Paez,Pasi A. Jänne,Pasi A. Jänne,Jeffrey C. Lee,Sean Tracy,Heidi Greulich,Heidi Greulich,Stacey Gabriel,Paula Herman,Frederic J. Kaye,Neal I. Lindeman,Titus J. Boggon,Katsuhiko Naoki,Hidefumini Sasaki,Yoshitaka Fujii,Michael J. Eck,William R. Sellers,William R. Sellers,William R. Sellers,Bruce E. Johnson,Bruce E. Johnson,Matthew Meyerson,Matthew Meyerson +22 more
TL;DR: Results suggest that EGFR mutations may predict sensitivity to gefitinib, and treatment with the EGFR kinase inhibitor gefitsinib causes tumor regression in some patients with NSCLC, more frequently in Japan.
Journal ArticleDOI
Surfing the p53 network
TL;DR: The p53 tumour-suppressor gene integrates numerous signals that control cell life and death, and the disruption of p53 has severe consequences when a highly connected node in the Internet breaks down.
Journal ArticleDOI
Targeting HIF-1 for cancer therapy
TL;DR: Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1) activates the transcription of genes that are involved in crucial aspects of cancer biology, including angiogenesis, cell survival, glucose metabolism and invasion.