The elucidation of the human genome sequence has made it possible to identify genetic alterations in cancers in unprecedented detail. To begin a systematic analysis of such alterations, we determined the sequence of well-annotated human protein-coding genes in two common tumor types. Analysis of 13,023 genes in 11 breast and 11 colorectal cancers revealed that individual tumors accumulate an average of È90 mutant genes but that only a subset of these contribute to the neoplastic process. Using stringent criteria to delineate this subset, we identified 189 genes (average of 11 per tumor) that were mutated at significant frequency. The vast majority of these genes were not known to be genetically altered in tumors and are predicted to affect ...
How many genes are mutated in ahuman tumor? Answering thisquestion would have seemed like science fi...
We analysed whole-genome sequences of 560 breast cancers to advance understanding of the driver muta...
The notion that DNA changes could drive the growth of cancer was first speculated more than a centur...
Cancers arise owing to mutations in a subset of genes that confer growth advantage. The availability...
AbstractIt is now widely accepted that cancer is a genetic disease and that alterations in the DNA s...
According to dogma in the information era of biomedicine, more DNA sequencing and protein profiling ...
Abstract The genetic mutations that contribute to the transformation of healthy cells into cancerous...
With the rapid development of next-generation sequencing, deeper insights are being gained into the ...
Cells in the human body contain DNA genomes that encode instructions regulating their biology. Accum...
It is widely accepted that cancer is a disease caused by accu-mulation of mutations in specific gene...
The identification and characterization of tumor suppressor genes has enhanced our understanding of ...
AbstractThe draft human genome sequence and the dissemination of high throughput technology provides...
A comprehensive understanding of the molecular vulnerabilities of every type of cancer will provide ...
Cancer is a genetic disease. Step-wise alteration of genes that have a normal function in the cell c...
The transformation of a normal cell into a cancer cell involves the accumulation of somatic DNA alte...
How many genes are mutated in ahuman tumor? Answering thisquestion would have seemed like science fi...
We analysed whole-genome sequences of 560 breast cancers to advance understanding of the driver muta...
The notion that DNA changes could drive the growth of cancer was first speculated more than a centur...
Cancers arise owing to mutations in a subset of genes that confer growth advantage. The availability...
AbstractIt is now widely accepted that cancer is a genetic disease and that alterations in the DNA s...
According to dogma in the information era of biomedicine, more DNA sequencing and protein profiling ...
Abstract The genetic mutations that contribute to the transformation of healthy cells into cancerous...
With the rapid development of next-generation sequencing, deeper insights are being gained into the ...
Cells in the human body contain DNA genomes that encode instructions regulating their biology. Accum...
It is widely accepted that cancer is a disease caused by accu-mulation of mutations in specific gene...
The identification and characterization of tumor suppressor genes has enhanced our understanding of ...
AbstractThe draft human genome sequence and the dissemination of high throughput technology provides...
A comprehensive understanding of the molecular vulnerabilities of every type of cancer will provide ...
Cancer is a genetic disease. Step-wise alteration of genes that have a normal function in the cell c...
The transformation of a normal cell into a cancer cell involves the accumulation of somatic DNA alte...
How many genes are mutated in ahuman tumor? Answering thisquestion would have seemed like science fi...
We analysed whole-genome sequences of 560 breast cancers to advance understanding of the driver muta...
The notion that DNA changes could drive the growth of cancer was first speculated more than a centur...