Background: Hundreds of proteins and genes are involved in initiation and growth of tumors. These proteins and genes act in coordinated ways, and their relations are visualized as networks. Networks are more accurate descriptions of cancer regulatory mechanisms, in comparison to lists of oncogenes and tumor suppressors. To extract essential regulators (nodes) and connections (edges), interrogations of these networks are performed, e.g. cancer cells are subjected to different treatments. Interrogations force cancer cells to engage nodes and edges essential for maintaining cancer properties, i.e. drivers, and non-essential followers. The challenge is to discriminate which of the mechanisms drive tumorigenesis, and which are followers. Interro...
Mutations or overexpression of signalling genes can result in cancer development and metastasis. In ...
Cancer is increasingly described as a systems-level, network phenomenon. Genetic methods, such as ne...
Since the discovery of the Warburg effect in the 1920s cancer has been tightly associated with the g...
Background: Cancer arises from the consecutive acquisition of genetic alterations. Increasing eviden...
Neoplastic growth and many of the hallmark properties of cancer are driven by the disruption of mole...
Neoplastic growth and many of the hallmark properties of cancer are driven by the disruption of mole...
Background/Aim: Proteomics of invasiveness opens a window on the complexity of the metastasis-engage...
Cancer is now appreciated as not only a highly heterogenous pathology with respect to cell type and ...
It is becoming evident that holistic perspectives toward cancer are crucial in deciphering the overw...
Genomic alterations lead to cancer complexity and form a major hurdle for comprehensive understandin...
It is becoming evident that holistic perspectives toward cancer are crucial in deciphering the overw...
Cancer research has, so far, primarily taken the form of intensive investigation of individual genes...
There is a widening recognition that cancer cells are products of complex developmental processes. C...
Cancer is increasingly described as a systems-level, network phenomenon. Genetic methods, such as ne...
Background: Cancer arises from the consecutive acquisition of genetic alterations. Increasing eviden...
Mutations or overexpression of signalling genes can result in cancer development and metastasis. In ...
Cancer is increasingly described as a systems-level, network phenomenon. Genetic methods, such as ne...
Since the discovery of the Warburg effect in the 1920s cancer has been tightly associated with the g...
Background: Cancer arises from the consecutive acquisition of genetic alterations. Increasing eviden...
Neoplastic growth and many of the hallmark properties of cancer are driven by the disruption of mole...
Neoplastic growth and many of the hallmark properties of cancer are driven by the disruption of mole...
Background/Aim: Proteomics of invasiveness opens a window on the complexity of the metastasis-engage...
Cancer is now appreciated as not only a highly heterogenous pathology with respect to cell type and ...
It is becoming evident that holistic perspectives toward cancer are crucial in deciphering the overw...
Genomic alterations lead to cancer complexity and form a major hurdle for comprehensive understandin...
It is becoming evident that holistic perspectives toward cancer are crucial in deciphering the overw...
Cancer research has, so far, primarily taken the form of intensive investigation of individual genes...
There is a widening recognition that cancer cells are products of complex developmental processes. C...
Cancer is increasingly described as a systems-level, network phenomenon. Genetic methods, such as ne...
Background: Cancer arises from the consecutive acquisition of genetic alterations. Increasing eviden...
Mutations or overexpression of signalling genes can result in cancer development and metastasis. In ...
Cancer is increasingly described as a systems-level, network phenomenon. Genetic methods, such as ne...
Since the discovery of the Warburg effect in the 1920s cancer has been tightly associated with the g...