[Abstract] Intracellular signalling mediated by secreted Wnt proteins is essential for the establishment of cell fates and proper tissue patterning during embryo development and for the regulation of tissue homeostasis and stem cell function in adult tissues. Aberrant activation of Wnt signalling pathways has been directly linked to the genesis of different tumours. Here, the components and molecular mechanisms implicated in the transduction of Wnt signal, along with important results supporting a central role for this signalling pathway in stem cell function regulation and carcinogenesis will be briefly reviewed.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación; SAF2008-0060
The adult human body is built of around 3.72 × 1013 cells. These cells display a great variation in ...
Human embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells comprise the pluripotent stem cells of malignant non-seminomato...
It has been two decades since investigators discovered the link between the Drosophila wingless (Wg)...
The Wnt pathway is a signal-transduction cascade that mediates communication between cells; the Wnt ...
The Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway is crucial in animal development from sponges to humans. Its act...
Wnt proteins comprise one family of secreted signaling molecules that is conserved in a wide range o...
A remarkable interdisciplinary effort has unraveled the WNT (Wingless and INT-1) signal transduction...
Wnt signalling is involved in a variety of mammalian developmental processes, including cell prolife...
AbstractMany cancers have similar aberrations in various signaling cascades with crucial roles in ce...
Wnt signaling is one of a handful of powerful signaling pathways that play crucial roles in the anim...
AbstractThe wnt signal transduction pathway is involved in many differentiation events during embryo...
ABSTRACT: In cancers, many signals were involved in self-renewal, differentiation and proliferation....
The importance of Wnt/β-catenin signaling in cancer stem cells (CSCs) has been acknowledged; however...
AbstractWnt signaling transduces evolutionarily conserved pathways which play important roles in ini...
The Wnt signaling pathway is a biological mechanism for cell-cell communication found across all spe...
The adult human body is built of around 3.72 × 1013 cells. These cells display a great variation in ...
Human embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells comprise the pluripotent stem cells of malignant non-seminomato...
It has been two decades since investigators discovered the link between the Drosophila wingless (Wg)...
The Wnt pathway is a signal-transduction cascade that mediates communication between cells; the Wnt ...
The Wnt/β-catenin signaling pathway is crucial in animal development from sponges to humans. Its act...
Wnt proteins comprise one family of secreted signaling molecules that is conserved in a wide range o...
A remarkable interdisciplinary effort has unraveled the WNT (Wingless and INT-1) signal transduction...
Wnt signalling is involved in a variety of mammalian developmental processes, including cell prolife...
AbstractMany cancers have similar aberrations in various signaling cascades with crucial roles in ce...
Wnt signaling is one of a handful of powerful signaling pathways that play crucial roles in the anim...
AbstractThe wnt signal transduction pathway is involved in many differentiation events during embryo...
ABSTRACT: In cancers, many signals were involved in self-renewal, differentiation and proliferation....
The importance of Wnt/β-catenin signaling in cancer stem cells (CSCs) has been acknowledged; however...
AbstractWnt signaling transduces evolutionarily conserved pathways which play important roles in ini...
The Wnt signaling pathway is a biological mechanism for cell-cell communication found across all spe...
The adult human body is built of around 3.72 × 1013 cells. These cells display a great variation in ...
Human embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells comprise the pluripotent stem cells of malignant non-seminomato...
It has been two decades since investigators discovered the link between the Drosophila wingless (Wg)...