The high mobility group A (HMGA) proteins are thought to work as ancillary transcription factors and to regulate the expression of a growing number of genes through direct binding to DNA or via protein-protein interactions. Both HMGA1 and HMGA2 are important regulators of basic biological processes, including cell growth, differentiation and transformation. Their qualitatively or quantitatively altered expression has been described in a number of human tumors. We studied and review here their expression in neuroblastic tumors. HMGA2 is expressed only in a subset of ex vivo neuroblastoma (NB) tumors and in the embryonic adrenal gland, but it is undetectable in the adult adrenal gland, suggesting that its anomalous expression might be associa...
The high mobility group AT-hook (HMGA) proteins, a family of DNA architectural factors, are highly e...
Almost 30 years ago, overexpression of HMGA proteins was associated with malignant phenotype of rat ...
Almost 30 years ago, overexpression of HMGA proteins was associated with malignant phenotype of rat ...
HMGI-C and HMGI(Y) are architectural DNA-binding proteins that participate in the conformational reg...
Very soon after their original identification in HeLa cells in 1983, HMGA proteins appeared as inter...
High mobility group A1 (HMGA1) is an architectural transcription factor and a putative protoncogene....
Long-standing studies have clearly established that the architectural chromatinic proteins High Mobi...
Long-standing studies have clearly established that the architectural chromatinic proteins High Mobi...
Long-standing studies have clearly established that the architectural chromatinic proteins High Mobi...
Long-standing studies have clearly established that the architectural chromatinic proteins High Mobi...
To assess whether retinoblastoma formation is associated with the expression of high mobility group ...
To assess whether retinoblastoma formation is associated with the expression of high mobility group ...
To assess whether retinoblastoma formation is associated with the expression of high mobility group ...
The high mobility group AT-hook (HMGA) proteins, a family of DNA architectural factors, are highly e...
The high mobility group AT-hook (HMGA) proteins, a family of DNA architectural factors, are highly e...
The high mobility group AT-hook (HMGA) proteins, a family of DNA architectural factors, are highly e...
Almost 30 years ago, overexpression of HMGA proteins was associated with malignant phenotype of rat ...
Almost 30 years ago, overexpression of HMGA proteins was associated with malignant phenotype of rat ...
HMGI-C and HMGI(Y) are architectural DNA-binding proteins that participate in the conformational reg...
Very soon after their original identification in HeLa cells in 1983, HMGA proteins appeared as inter...
High mobility group A1 (HMGA1) is an architectural transcription factor and a putative protoncogene....
Long-standing studies have clearly established that the architectural chromatinic proteins High Mobi...
Long-standing studies have clearly established that the architectural chromatinic proteins High Mobi...
Long-standing studies have clearly established that the architectural chromatinic proteins High Mobi...
Long-standing studies have clearly established that the architectural chromatinic proteins High Mobi...
To assess whether retinoblastoma formation is associated with the expression of high mobility group ...
To assess whether retinoblastoma formation is associated with the expression of high mobility group ...
To assess whether retinoblastoma formation is associated with the expression of high mobility group ...
The high mobility group AT-hook (HMGA) proteins, a family of DNA architectural factors, are highly e...
The high mobility group AT-hook (HMGA) proteins, a family of DNA architectural factors, are highly e...
The high mobility group AT-hook (HMGA) proteins, a family of DNA architectural factors, are highly e...
Almost 30 years ago, overexpression of HMGA proteins was associated with malignant phenotype of rat ...
Almost 30 years ago, overexpression of HMGA proteins was associated with malignant phenotype of rat ...