How cancer cells acquire the competence to colonize distant organs remains a central question in cancer biology. Tumors can release large numbers of cancer cells into the circulation, but only a small proportion of these cells survive on infiltrating distant organs and even fewer form clinically meaningful metastases. During the past decade, many predictive gene signatures and specific mediators of metastasis have been identified, yet how cancer cells acquire these traits has remained obscure. Recent experimental work and high-resolution sequencing of human tissues have started to reveal the molecular and tumor evolutionary principles that underlie the emergence of metastatic traits
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
Abstract: Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality, and a detailed unders...
Cancers emerge from an ongoing Darwinian evolutionary process, often leading to multiple competing s...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
Metastases represent the end products of a multistep cell-biological process termed the invasion-met...
SummaryHow organ-specific metastatic traits arise in primary tumors remains unknown. Here, we show a...
Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide, and our inability to identi...
Metastasis is the result of cancer cell adaptation to a tissue microenvironment at a distance from t...
Metastasis is the result of cancer cell adaptation to a tissue microenvironment at a distance from t...
Metastasis is the main cause of cancer death, yet the evolutionary processes behind it remain largel...
Cancer metastasis is the lethal developmental step in cancer, responsible for the majority of cancer...
Tumour progression involves a series of phenotypic changes to cancer cells, each of which presents t...
AbstractThe crucial event in the course of malignancies such as breast cancer is its metastatic spre...
Cancer is often regarded as a process of asexual evolution driven by genomic and genetic instability...
An important question in cancer evolution concerns which traits make a cell likely to successfully m...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
Abstract: Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality, and a detailed unders...
Cancers emerge from an ongoing Darwinian evolutionary process, often leading to multiple competing s...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
Metastases represent the end products of a multistep cell-biological process termed the invasion-met...
SummaryHow organ-specific metastatic traits arise in primary tumors remains unknown. Here, we show a...
Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide, and our inability to identi...
Metastasis is the result of cancer cell adaptation to a tissue microenvironment at a distance from t...
Metastasis is the result of cancer cell adaptation to a tissue microenvironment at a distance from t...
Metastasis is the main cause of cancer death, yet the evolutionary processes behind it remain largel...
Cancer metastasis is the lethal developmental step in cancer, responsible for the majority of cancer...
Tumour progression involves a series of phenotypic changes to cancer cells, each of which presents t...
AbstractThe crucial event in the course of malignancies such as breast cancer is its metastatic spre...
Cancer is often regarded as a process of asexual evolution driven by genomic and genetic instability...
An important question in cancer evolution concerns which traits make a cell likely to successfully m...
Metastasis occurs when genetically unstable cancer cells adapt to a tissue microenvironment that is ...
Abstract: Metastasis remains the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality, and a detailed unders...
Cancers emerge from an ongoing Darwinian evolutionary process, often leading to multiple competing s...