Human cancer cells bear complex chromosome rearrangements that can be potential drivers of cancer development. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying these rearrangements have been unclear. Zhang et al. use a new technique combining live-cell imaging and single-cell sequencing to demonstrate that chromosomes mis-segregated to micronuclei frequently undergo chromothripsis-like rearrangements in the subsequent cell cycle
e-letterUnderstanding the mechanims responsible for cancer genome complexity has been an important g...
During mitosis, chromosomes undergo extensive structural changes resulting in the formation of compa...
Cancer genomes are frequently characterized by numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities. H...
Human cancer cells bear complex chromosome rearrangements that can be potential drivers of cancer de...
Genome sequencing has uncovered a new mutational phenomenon in cancer and congenital disorders calle...
Cancer cells often harbor chromosomes in abnormal numbers and with aberrant structure. The consequen...
Cancer genome sequencing has identified chromothripsis, a complex class of structural genomic rearra...
Chromosomal instability is one of the hallmarks of cancer and caused by chromosome missegregation du...
A report in this issue describes “chromothripsis,” a new mechanism for genetic instability in cancer...
SummaryCancer is driven by somatically acquired point mutations and chromosomal rearrangements, conv...
SummaryChromothripsis represents a novel phenomenon in the structural variation landscape of cancer ...
The chromosome breakage-fusion-bridge (BFB) cycle is a mutational process that produces gene amplifi...
Chromoanagenesis is a catch-all term of recently described catastrophic events that generate complex...
Chromosome missegregation into a micronucleus can cause complex and localized genomic rearrangements...
Cancer genomes are frequently characterized by numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities. H...
e-letterUnderstanding the mechanims responsible for cancer genome complexity has been an important g...
During mitosis, chromosomes undergo extensive structural changes resulting in the formation of compa...
Cancer genomes are frequently characterized by numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities. H...
Human cancer cells bear complex chromosome rearrangements that can be potential drivers of cancer de...
Genome sequencing has uncovered a new mutational phenomenon in cancer and congenital disorders calle...
Cancer cells often harbor chromosomes in abnormal numbers and with aberrant structure. The consequen...
Cancer genome sequencing has identified chromothripsis, a complex class of structural genomic rearra...
Chromosomal instability is one of the hallmarks of cancer and caused by chromosome missegregation du...
A report in this issue describes “chromothripsis,” a new mechanism for genetic instability in cancer...
SummaryCancer is driven by somatically acquired point mutations and chromosomal rearrangements, conv...
SummaryChromothripsis represents a novel phenomenon in the structural variation landscape of cancer ...
The chromosome breakage-fusion-bridge (BFB) cycle is a mutational process that produces gene amplifi...
Chromoanagenesis is a catch-all term of recently described catastrophic events that generate complex...
Chromosome missegregation into a micronucleus can cause complex and localized genomic rearrangements...
Cancer genomes are frequently characterized by numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities. H...
e-letterUnderstanding the mechanims responsible for cancer genome complexity has been an important g...
During mitosis, chromosomes undergo extensive structural changes resulting in the formation of compa...
Cancer genomes are frequently characterized by numerical and structural chromosomal abnormalities. H...