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Core Signaling Pathways in Human Pancreatic Cancers Revealed by Global Genomic Analyses

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TLDR
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.
Abstract
There are currently few therapeutic options for patients with pancreatic cancer, and new insights into the pathogenesis of this lethal disease are urgently needed. Toward this end, we performed a comprehensive genetic analysis of 24 pancreatic cancers. We first determined the sequences of 23,219 transcripts, representing 20,661 protein-coding genes, in these samples. Then, we searched for homozygous deletions and amplifications in the tumor DNA by using microarrays containing probes for approximately 10(6) single-nucleotide polymorphisms. We found that pancreatic cancers contain an average of 63 genetic alterations, the majority of which are point mutations. These alterations defined a core set of 12 cellular signaling pathways and processes that were each genetically altered in 67 to 100% of the tumors. Analysis of these tumors' transcriptomes with next-generation sequencing-by-synthesis technologies provided independent evidence for the importance of these pathways and processes. Our data indicate that genetically altered core pathways and regulatory processes only become evident once the coding regions of the genome are analyzed in depth. Dysregulation of these core pathways and processes through mutation can explain the major features of pancreatic tumorigenesis.

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Mitochondrially targeted anti-cancer agents

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Is carcinogenesis a form of speciation

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microRNA-10b enhances pancreatic cancer cell invasion by suppressing TIP30 expression and promoting EGF and TGF-β actions.

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No paradox, no progress: inverse cancer comorbidity in people with other complex diseases

TL;DR: Evidence from epidemiological and clinical studies that supports a consistently lower than expected occurrence of cancer in patients with Down's syndrome, Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia, diabetes, Alzheimer's Disease, multiple sclerosis, and anorexia nervosa is reviewed.
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CDK6—a review of the past and a glimpse into the future: from cell-cycle control to transcriptional regulation

TL;DR: The literature on the contribution of CDK6 to transcription is reviewed in an attempt to link the new findings on CDK 6’s transcriptional activity to cell-cycle progression, and it is noted that anticancer therapies based on the inhibition ofCDK6 kinase activity fail to take into account its kinase-independent role in tumor development.
References
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TL;DR: This work has been supported by the Department of the Army and the National Institutes of Health, and the author acknowledges the support and encouragement of the National Cancer Institute.
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Book

Pancreatic Cancer

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