Genetic recombination systems are present in all living cells and viruses and generally contribute to their hosts' flexibility with respect to changing environmental conditions. Recombination systems not only help highly developed organisms to protect themselves from microbial attack via an elaborate immune system, but conversely, recombination systems also enable microorganisms to escape from such an immune system. Recombination enzymes act with a high specificity on DNA sequences that either exhibit extended stretches of homology or contain characteristic signal sequences. However, recombination enzymes may rarely act on incorrect alternative target sequences, which may result in the formation of chromosomal deletions, inversions, translo...
Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) is a common genetic alteration in tumors and often extends several mega...
Chromosome rearrangements cause genomic disorders and cancer in human. Region-specific low-copy repe...
Our present understanding of how cells recombine homologous DNA sequences stems from many elegant st...
Cancer develops when cells no longer follow their normal pattern of controlled growth. In the absenc...
Thesis (Ph. D. in Genetic Toxicology)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Biological Engineering...
Homologous recombination (HR) is critical both for repairing DNA lesions in mitosis and for chromo-s...
Carcinogens are generally classified into two groups: genotoxic and non-genotoxic. As the final prod...
A large number of animal and human carcinogens without apparent genotoxic activity exist (nonmutagen...
Mismatch repair defects are carcinogenic. This conclusion comes some 80 years after the original des...
© 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.The pKZ1 recombination mutagenesis model has provided a sen...
Translocations and gross deletions constitute an important cause of both cancer and inherited diseas...
The object of investigation: the cultures of cells of animals and of the man. The purpose of the wor...
The maintenance of genome integrity involves multiple independent DNA damage avoidance and repair me...
Recombination is a central process to stably maintain and transmit a genome through somatic cell div...
Not all carcinogens are mutagens, and many mutagens are not carcinogens. Among related chemicals, sm...
Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) is a common genetic alteration in tumors and often extends several mega...
Chromosome rearrangements cause genomic disorders and cancer in human. Region-specific low-copy repe...
Our present understanding of how cells recombine homologous DNA sequences stems from many elegant st...
Cancer develops when cells no longer follow their normal pattern of controlled growth. In the absenc...
Thesis (Ph. D. in Genetic Toxicology)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Biological Engineering...
Homologous recombination (HR) is critical both for repairing DNA lesions in mitosis and for chromo-s...
Carcinogens are generally classified into two groups: genotoxic and non-genotoxic. As the final prod...
A large number of animal and human carcinogens without apparent genotoxic activity exist (nonmutagen...
Mismatch repair defects are carcinogenic. This conclusion comes some 80 years after the original des...
© 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.The pKZ1 recombination mutagenesis model has provided a sen...
Translocations and gross deletions constitute an important cause of both cancer and inherited diseas...
The object of investigation: the cultures of cells of animals and of the man. The purpose of the wor...
The maintenance of genome integrity involves multiple independent DNA damage avoidance and repair me...
Recombination is a central process to stably maintain and transmit a genome through somatic cell div...
Not all carcinogens are mutagens, and many mutagens are not carcinogens. Among related chemicals, sm...
Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) is a common genetic alteration in tumors and often extends several mega...
Chromosome rearrangements cause genomic disorders and cancer in human. Region-specific low-copy repe...
Our present understanding of how cells recombine homologous DNA sequences stems from many elegant st...