none5Cell competition is a mechanism conserved from Drosophila to mammals, based on the comparison of relative fitness between neighbouring cells, leading to the apoptotic elimination of the weakest. Several molecules are involved in these competitive interactions: in particular, cells expressing high levels of MYC grow at the expense of surrounding cells. In Drosophila epithelia, MYC-Mediated Cell Competition5 (MMCC) selects cells undergoing clonal expansion, and p53 function is necessary in MYC-overexpressing cells to sustain their competitive advantage. Malignant cells often upregulate MYC and results obtained in our lab suggest that MMCC can shape tumour expansion and evolution. p53 is one of the most frequently mutated genes in human c...
AbstractOverexpression of myc protooncogenes has been implicated in the genesis of many human tumors...
Overexpression of myc protooncogenes has been implicated in the genesis of many human tumors. Myc pr...
SummaryCell competition was originally described in Drosophila as a process for selection of the fit...
Cell competition is a mechanism conserved from Drosophila to mammals, based on the comparison of rel...
none7noCell competition is a mechanism conserved from Drosophila to mammals, based on the compariso...
Cell competition was originally described in Drosophila as a physiological process based on the comp...
none2Cell competition was first discovered as a homeostatic mechanism resulting from bi-directional ...
none5noMYC-Mediated Cell Competition (MMCC) is a phenomenon of fitness comparison occurring between ...
SummaryIn growing tissues, cell fitness disparities can provoke interactions that promote stronger c...
Cell competition describes the result of a mechanism of fitness comparison undertaken by cells inhab...
MYC-mediated cell competition is a cell-cell interaction mechanism known to play an evolutionary rol...
Deregulation of MYC family proteins in cancer is associated with a global reprogramming of gene expr...
AbstractDuring Drosophila development, cells with elevated levels of the Myc oncoprotein grow faster...
Cancer has long been regarded and treated as a foreign body appearing by mistake inside a living org...
AbstractOverexpression of myc protooncogenes has been implicated in the genesis of many human tumors...
Overexpression of myc protooncogenes has been implicated in the genesis of many human tumors. Myc pr...
SummaryCell competition was originally described in Drosophila as a process for selection of the fit...
Cell competition is a mechanism conserved from Drosophila to mammals, based on the comparison of rel...
none7noCell competition is a mechanism conserved from Drosophila to mammals, based on the compariso...
Cell competition was originally described in Drosophila as a physiological process based on the comp...
none2Cell competition was first discovered as a homeostatic mechanism resulting from bi-directional ...
none5noMYC-Mediated Cell Competition (MMCC) is a phenomenon of fitness comparison occurring between ...
SummaryIn growing tissues, cell fitness disparities can provoke interactions that promote stronger c...
Cell competition describes the result of a mechanism of fitness comparison undertaken by cells inhab...
MYC-mediated cell competition is a cell-cell interaction mechanism known to play an evolutionary rol...
Deregulation of MYC family proteins in cancer is associated with a global reprogramming of gene expr...
AbstractDuring Drosophila development, cells with elevated levels of the Myc oncoprotein grow faster...
Cancer has long been regarded and treated as a foreign body appearing by mistake inside a living org...
AbstractOverexpression of myc protooncogenes has been implicated in the genesis of many human tumors...
Overexpression of myc protooncogenes has been implicated in the genesis of many human tumors. Myc pr...
SummaryCell competition was originally described in Drosophila as a process for selection of the fit...