YesThe revolution in Big Data has opened the gate for new research challenges in biomedical science. The aim of this study was to investigate whether germ-line gene mutations are a significant factor in 29 major primary human cancers. Using data obtained from multiple biological databases, we identified 424 genes from 8879 cancer mutation records. By integrating these gene mutation records a human cancer map was constructed from which several key results were obtained. These include the observations that missense/nonsense and regulatory mutations might play central role in connecting cancers/genes, and tend to be distributed in all chromosomes. This suggests that, of all mutation classes missense/nonsense and regulatory mutation classes are...
A cancer genome carries the historic mutagenic activity that has occurred throughout the development...
Genomics has been transformative to the study of human evolution and disease. With the dropping cost...
Driver mutations are the genetic variants responsible for oncogenesis, but how specific somatic muta...
The genetic causes of cancer include both somatic mutations and inherited germline variants. Large-...
AbstractIt is now widely accepted that cancer is a genetic disease and that alterations in the DNA s...
Cancers arise owing to mutations in a subset of genes that confer growth advantage. The availability...
Cancer research, like many areas of science, is adapting to a new era characterized by increasing qu...
Cancer, a disease of the genome, is caused by a combination of germline predisposing variants and ac...
The notion that DNA changes could drive the growth of cancer was first speculated more than a centur...
Cancer is underlined by genetic changes. In an unprecedented international effort, the Pan-Cancer An...
As the genomic profile across cancers varies from person to person, patient prognosis and treatment ...
Summary: Large-scale cancer sequencing studies of patient cohorts have statistically implicated many...
Mutations in hallmark genes are believed to be the main drivers of cancer progression. These mutatio...
Somatic mutations in cancer genomes are caused by multiple mutational processes, each of which gener...
The completion of the human genome sequence in 2003 clearly marked the beginning of a new era for bi...
A cancer genome carries the historic mutagenic activity that has occurred throughout the development...
Genomics has been transformative to the study of human evolution and disease. With the dropping cost...
Driver mutations are the genetic variants responsible for oncogenesis, but how specific somatic muta...
The genetic causes of cancer include both somatic mutations and inherited germline variants. Large-...
AbstractIt is now widely accepted that cancer is a genetic disease and that alterations in the DNA s...
Cancers arise owing to mutations in a subset of genes that confer growth advantage. The availability...
Cancer research, like many areas of science, is adapting to a new era characterized by increasing qu...
Cancer, a disease of the genome, is caused by a combination of germline predisposing variants and ac...
The notion that DNA changes could drive the growth of cancer was first speculated more than a centur...
Cancer is underlined by genetic changes. In an unprecedented international effort, the Pan-Cancer An...
As the genomic profile across cancers varies from person to person, patient prognosis and treatment ...
Summary: Large-scale cancer sequencing studies of patient cohorts have statistically implicated many...
Mutations in hallmark genes are believed to be the main drivers of cancer progression. These mutatio...
Somatic mutations in cancer genomes are caused by multiple mutational processes, each of which gener...
The completion of the human genome sequence in 2003 clearly marked the beginning of a new era for bi...
A cancer genome carries the historic mutagenic activity that has occurred throughout the development...
Genomics has been transformative to the study of human evolution and disease. With the dropping cost...
Driver mutations are the genetic variants responsible for oncogenesis, but how specific somatic muta...