It has been known for over 100 years that cancers have individual karyotypes and arise only years to decades after initiating carcinogens. However, there is still no coherent theory to explain these definitive characteristics of cancer. The prevailing mutation theory holds that cancers are late because the primary cell must accumulate 3–8 causative mutations to become carcinogenic and that mutations, which induce chromosomal instability (CIN), generate the individual karyotypes of cancers. However, since there is still no proven set of mutations that transforms a normal to a cancer cell, we have recently advanced the theory that carcinogenesis is a form of speciation. This theory predicts carcinogens initiate cancer by inducing aneupl...
Chromosomal aberrations during cell division represent one of the first recognized features of human...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...
It has been known for over 100 years that cancers have individual karyotypes and arise only years to...
Abstract Cancers have clonal, aneuploid karyotypes that evolve ever more malignant phenotypes sponta...
Conventional genetic theories have failed to explain why cancer (1) is not heritable and thus extrem...
Abstract Background In 1952 Papanicolaou et al. first diagnosed and graded cervical carcinomas based...
BACKGROUND: The genetic basis of metastasis is still unclear because metastases carry individual kar...
Genomic instability (GIN) is a hallmark of cancer cells that facilitates the acquisition of mutation...
Abstract. Conventional genetic theories have failed to explain why cancer (1) is not heritable and t...
Genomic instability (GIN) is a hallmark of cancer cells that facilitates the acquisition of mutation...
Numerical chromosomal instability is a ubiquitous feature of human neoplasms. Due to experimental li...
Abstract Background Foulds defined, “Tumor progression (as a) permanent, irreversible qualitative ch...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...
Chromosomal aberrations during cell division represent one of the first recognized features of human...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...
It has been known for over 100 years that cancers have individual karyotypes and arise only years to...
Abstract Cancers have clonal, aneuploid karyotypes that evolve ever more malignant phenotypes sponta...
Conventional genetic theories have failed to explain why cancer (1) is not heritable and thus extrem...
Abstract Background In 1952 Papanicolaou et al. first diagnosed and graded cervical carcinomas based...
BACKGROUND: The genetic basis of metastasis is still unclear because metastases carry individual kar...
Genomic instability (GIN) is a hallmark of cancer cells that facilitates the acquisition of mutation...
Abstract. Conventional genetic theories have failed to explain why cancer (1) is not heritable and t...
Genomic instability (GIN) is a hallmark of cancer cells that facilitates the acquisition of mutation...
Numerical chromosomal instability is a ubiquitous feature of human neoplasms. Due to experimental li...
Abstract Background Foulds defined, “Tumor progression (as a) permanent, irreversible qualitative ch...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...
Chromosomal aberrations during cell division represent one of the first recognized features of human...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...
Chromosomal instability (CIN) is a phenomenon where cells mis-segregate chromosomes more frequently ...