AbstractClassic mechanisms of tumor response to chemotherapy include apoptosis, mitotic catastrophe. Recent studies have suggested that cellular senescence, a terminal proliferation arrest seen in vitro, may be invoked during the exposure of cancer cells to chemotherapeutic agents. To identify markers associated specifically with the cellular senescence phenotype, we utilized expression data from cDNA microarray experiments identifying transcripts whose expression levels increased as human prostate epithelial cells progressed to senescence. When screened against other growth-inhibitory conditions, including quiescence, apoptosis, many of these transcripts were also upregulated, indicating that similar pathways occur between apoptosis, senes...
Abstract Anticancer drug-induced tumor suppression may involve mechanisms of protection against neo...
Cellular senescence is a state of irreversible growth arrest activated by a complex response to stre...
This thesis explores the potential of the ‘one-two punch’ therapy, in which cancer cells are first i...
Classic mechanisms of tumor response to chemotherapy include apoptosis, mitotic catastrophe. Recent ...
Classic mechanisms of tumor response to chemother-apy include apoptosis and mitotic catastrophe. Rec...
Evasion of cellular senescence is required for the immortal phenotype of tumor cells. The tumor supp...
Evasion of cellular senescence is required for the immortal phenotype of tumor cells. The tumor supp...
Cellular senescence describes an irreversible growth arrest characterized by distinct morphology, ge...
Cellular senescence is a distinct cell state, characteristic by cessation of cell proliferation and ...
Replicative senescence is a programmed cellular response in normal cells, the induction of which dep...
Cellular senescence process results in stable cell cycle arrest, which prevents cell proliferation. ...
Therapy-induced senescence (TIS), a lasting chemotherapy-evoked proliferative arrest of tumor cells,...
Cellular senescence is characterized as a stable proliferation arrest that can be triggered by multi...
Prostate cancer is a disease of the old and with increasing life expectancy, its incidence will cont...
Anticancer drug-induced tumor suppression may involve mechanisms of protection against neoplastic tr...
Abstract Anticancer drug-induced tumor suppression may involve mechanisms of protection against neo...
Cellular senescence is a state of irreversible growth arrest activated by a complex response to stre...
This thesis explores the potential of the ‘one-two punch’ therapy, in which cancer cells are first i...
Classic mechanisms of tumor response to chemotherapy include apoptosis, mitotic catastrophe. Recent ...
Classic mechanisms of tumor response to chemother-apy include apoptosis and mitotic catastrophe. Rec...
Evasion of cellular senescence is required for the immortal phenotype of tumor cells. The tumor supp...
Evasion of cellular senescence is required for the immortal phenotype of tumor cells. The tumor supp...
Cellular senescence describes an irreversible growth arrest characterized by distinct morphology, ge...
Cellular senescence is a distinct cell state, characteristic by cessation of cell proliferation and ...
Replicative senescence is a programmed cellular response in normal cells, the induction of which dep...
Cellular senescence process results in stable cell cycle arrest, which prevents cell proliferation. ...
Therapy-induced senescence (TIS), a lasting chemotherapy-evoked proliferative arrest of tumor cells,...
Cellular senescence is characterized as a stable proliferation arrest that can be triggered by multi...
Prostate cancer is a disease of the old and with increasing life expectancy, its incidence will cont...
Anticancer drug-induced tumor suppression may involve mechanisms of protection against neoplastic tr...
Abstract Anticancer drug-induced tumor suppression may involve mechanisms of protection against neo...
Cellular senescence is a state of irreversible growth arrest activated by a complex response to stre...
This thesis explores the potential of the ‘one-two punch’ therapy, in which cancer cells are first i...