Journal ArticleDOI
Rules for making human tumor cells.
TLDR
The authors propose a considerably simplified scheme in which only five alterations are required to transform cells from a normal to a malignant phenotype.Abstract:
The apparent complexity of the genetic, biochemical, and physiological changes in cancer cells threatens to stall the elucidation of the origins of cancer and the development of new treatments for malignant diseases. The authors propose a considerably simplified scheme in which only five alterations are required to transform cells from a normal to a malignant phenotype.read more
Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI
A Multigene Assay to Predict Recurrence of Tamoxifen-Treated, Node-Negative Breast Cancer
Soonmyung Paik,Steven Shak,Gong Tang,Chungyeul Kim,Joffre B. Baker,Maureen T. Cronin,Frederick L. Baehner,Michael G. Walker,Drew Watson,Taesung Park,William Hiller,Edwin R. Fisher,D. Lawrence Wickerham,John Bryant,Norman Wolmark +14 more
TL;DR: The recurrence score has been validated as quantifying the likelihood of distant recurrence in tamoxifen-treated patients with node-negative, estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancer and could be used as a continuous function to predict distant recurrent in individual patients.
Journal ArticleDOI
Tumorigenesis and the angiogenic switch
TL;DR: A more detailed understanding of the complex parameters that govern the interactions between the tumour and vascular compartments will help to improve anti-angiogenic strategies — not only for cancer treatment, but also for preventing recurrence.
Journal ArticleDOI
The immunobiology of cancer immunosurveillance and immunoediting
TL;DR: The full understanding of the immunobiology of cancer immunosurveillance and immunoediting will hopefully stimulate development of more effective immunotherapeutic approaches to control and/or eliminate human cancers.
Journal ArticleDOI
The STATs of cancer — new molecular targets come of age
Hua Yu,Richard Jove +1 more
TL;DR: Tumour cells acquire the ability to proliferate uncontrollably, resist apoptosis, sustain angiogenesis and evade immune surveillance, and STAT proteins — especially STAT3 and STAT5 — regulate all of these processes and are persistence activated in a surprisingly large number of human cancers.
Journal ArticleDOI
Rb-mediated heterochromatin formation and silencing of E2F target genes during cellular senescence.
Masashi Narita,Sabrina Nuñez,Sabrina Nuñez,Edith Heard,Masako Narita,Athena W. Lin,Stephen Hearn,David L. Spector,Gregory J. Hannon,Scott W. Lowe +9 more
TL;DR: A distinct heterochromatic structure that accumulates in senescent human fibroblasts is described, which is designated senescence-associated heterochROMatic foci (SAHF) and is associated with the stable repression of E2F target genes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
The hallmarks of cancer.
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.
Journal ArticleDOI
Molecular portraits of human breast tumours
Charles M. Perou,Therese Sørlie,Michael B. Eisen,Matt van de Rijn,Stefanie S. Jeffrey,Christian A. Rees,Jonathan R. Pollack,Douglas T. Ross,Hilde Johnsen,Lars A. Akslen,Øystein Fluge,Alexander Pergamenschikov,Cheryl A. Williams,Shirley Zhu,Per Eystein Lønning,Anne Lise Børresen-Dale,Patrick O. Brown,David Botstein +17 more
TL;DR: Variation in gene expression patterns in a set of 65 surgical specimens of human breast tumours from 42 different individuals were characterized using complementary DNA microarrays representing 8,102 human genes, providing a distinctive molecular portrait of each tumour.
Journal ArticleDOI
Molecular classification of cancer: class discovery and class prediction by gene expression monitoring.
Todd R. Golub,Todd R. Golub,Donna K. Slonim,Pablo Tamayo,Christine Huard,Michelle Gaasenbeek,Jill P. Mesirov,Hilary A. Coller,Mignon L. Loh,James R. Downing,Michael A. Caligiuri,Clara D. Bloomfield,Eric S. Lander +12 more
TL;DR: A generic approach to cancer classification based on gene expression monitoring by DNA microarrays is described and applied to human acute leukemias as a test case and suggests a general strategy for discovering and predicting cancer classes for other types of cancer, independent of previous biological knowledge.
Journal ArticleDOI
A genetic model for colorectal tumorigenesis
Eric R. Fearon,Bert Vogelstein +1 more
TL;DR: A model for the genetic basis of colorectal neoplasia that includes the following salient features is presented, which may be applicable to other common epithelial neoplasms, in which tumors of varying stage are more difficult to study.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mutations of the BRAF gene in human cancer
Helen Davies,Graham R. Bignell,Charles Cox,Philip J. Stephens,Sarah Edkins,S. M. Clegg,Jon W. Teague,Hayley Woffendin,Mathew J. Garnett,William Bottomley,Neil Davis,Ed Dicks,Rebecca Ewing,Yvonne Floyd,Kristian Gray,S. Hall,Rachel Hawes,Jaime Hughes,Vivian Kosmidou,Andrew Menzies,Catherine Mould,Adrian Parker,Claire Stevens,Stephen Watt,Steven Hooper,Rebecca Wilson,Hiran Jayatilake,Barry A. Gusterson,Colin Cooper,Janet Shipley,Darren Hargrave,Kathy Pritchard-Jones,Norman J. Maitland,Georgia Chenevix-Trench,Gregory J. Riggins,Darell D. Bigner,Giuseppe Palmieri,Antonio Cossu,Adrienne M. Flanagan,Andrew G. Nicholson,Judy W. C. Ho,Suet Yi Leung,Siu Tsan Yuen,Barbara L. Weber,Hilliard F. Seigler,Timothy L. Darrow,Hugh Paterson,Richard Marais,Christopher J. Marshall,Richard Wooster,Michael R. Stratton,P. Andrew Futreal +51 more
TL;DR: BRAF somatic missense mutations in 66% of malignant melanomas and at lower frequency in a wide range of human cancers, with a single substitution (V599E) accounting for 80%.