Cancer is a comparatively well-studied disease, yet despite decades of intense focus, we demonstrate here using data from The Cancer Genome Atlas that a substantial number of genes implicated in cancer are relatively poorly studied. Those genes will likely be missed by any data analysis pipeline, such as enrichment analysis, that depends exclusively on annotations for understanding biological function. There is no indication that the amount of research - indicated by number of publications - is correlated with any objective metric of gene significance. Moreover, these genes are not missing at random but reflect that our information about genes is gathered in a biased manner: poorly studied genes are more likely to be primate-specific and le...
The massive genomic data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), including proteomics data from Clinica...
Cancer is underlined by genetic changes. In an unprecedented international effort, the Pan-Cancer An...
<p>Genes that are known to be associated with cancer (black) and all remaining genes (gray) were gro...
Cancer and genomics. Identification of the genes that cause oncogenesis is a central aim of cancer r...
Abstract Background Hundreds of genes that are causally implicated in oncogenesis have been found an...
Background: Systematic approaches for identifying proteins involved in different types of cancer are...
The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Research Network has profiled and analyzed large numbers of human tum...
Biomedical research has been previously reported to primarily focus on a minority of all known genes...
The Network of Cancer Genes (NCG) is a manually curated repository of 2372 genes whose somatic modif...
When growth regulatory genes are damaged in a cell, it may become cancerous. Current technological a...
Abstract The Network of Cancer Genes (NCG) is a manually curated repository of 2372 genes whose soma...
Biomedical research has been previously reported to primarily focus on a minority of all known genes...
Background: Modern high-throughput genomic technologies represent a comprehensive hallmark of molecu...
Cancer can exhibit different forms depending on the site of origin, cell types, the different forms ...
The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) projects have advanced our understanding of the driver mutations, gen...
The massive genomic data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), including proteomics data from Clinica...
Cancer is underlined by genetic changes. In an unprecedented international effort, the Pan-Cancer An...
<p>Genes that are known to be associated with cancer (black) and all remaining genes (gray) were gro...
Cancer and genomics. Identification of the genes that cause oncogenesis is a central aim of cancer r...
Abstract Background Hundreds of genes that are causally implicated in oncogenesis have been found an...
Background: Systematic approaches for identifying proteins involved in different types of cancer are...
The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) Research Network has profiled and analyzed large numbers of human tum...
Biomedical research has been previously reported to primarily focus on a minority of all known genes...
The Network of Cancer Genes (NCG) is a manually curated repository of 2372 genes whose somatic modif...
When growth regulatory genes are damaged in a cell, it may become cancerous. Current technological a...
Abstract The Network of Cancer Genes (NCG) is a manually curated repository of 2372 genes whose soma...
Biomedical research has been previously reported to primarily focus on a minority of all known genes...
Background: Modern high-throughput genomic technologies represent a comprehensive hallmark of molecu...
Cancer can exhibit different forms depending on the site of origin, cell types, the different forms ...
The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) projects have advanced our understanding of the driver mutations, gen...
The massive genomic data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), including proteomics data from Clinica...
Cancer is underlined by genetic changes. In an unprecedented international effort, the Pan-Cancer An...
<p>Genes that are known to be associated with cancer (black) and all remaining genes (gray) were gro...