Many cancers are aneuploid. However, the precise role that chromosomal instability plays in the development of cancer and in the response of tumours to treatment is still hotly debated. Here, to explore this question from a theoretical standpoint we have developed an agent-based model of tissue homeostasis in which to test the likely effects of whole chromosome mis-segregation during cancer development. In stochastic simulations, chromosome mis-segregation events at cell division lead to the generation of a diverse population of aneuploid clones that over time exhibit hyperplastic growth. Significantly, the course of cancer evolution depends on genetic linkage, as the structure of chromosomes lost or gained through mis-segregation events an...
Tumorigenesis in humans is thought to be a multistep process where certain mutations confer a select...
Unequal separation of the mother cells’ DNA over its two daughter cells upon cell division is a prev...
Cancer research needs to explain the observed incidence of cancer. Many factors determine this proce...
<div><p>Many cancers are aneuploid. However, the precise role that chromosomal instability plays in ...
The role of aneuploidy (the cellular state of having an abnormal number of chromosomes) in cancer is...
Numerical chromosomal instability is a ubiquitous feature of human neoplasms. Due to experimental li...
<div><p>An unbalanced chromosome number (aneuploidy) is present in most malignant tumours and has be...
An unbalanced chromosome number (aneuploidy) is present in most malignant tumours and has been attri...
Cancer cells frequently undergo chromosome missegregation events during mitosis, whereby the copies ...
Cancer cells frequently undergo chromosome missegregation events during mitosis, whereby the copies ...
Abstract Background Aneuploidy has long been recognized to be associated with cancer. A growing body...
Abstract Chromosome instability (CIN) has been associated with therapeutic resistance in many cancer...
<p>(A) Reported cytogenetic data from the Mitelman Database of Chromosome Aberrations and Gene Fusio...
Recent evidence suggests that a polyaneuploid cancer cell (PACC) state may play a key role in the ad...
Understanding the cellular mechanisms of tumour growth is key for designing rational anticancer trea...
Tumorigenesis in humans is thought to be a multistep process where certain mutations confer a select...
Unequal separation of the mother cells’ DNA over its two daughter cells upon cell division is a prev...
Cancer research needs to explain the observed incidence of cancer. Many factors determine this proce...
<div><p>Many cancers are aneuploid. However, the precise role that chromosomal instability plays in ...
The role of aneuploidy (the cellular state of having an abnormal number of chromosomes) in cancer is...
Numerical chromosomal instability is a ubiquitous feature of human neoplasms. Due to experimental li...
<div><p>An unbalanced chromosome number (aneuploidy) is present in most malignant tumours and has be...
An unbalanced chromosome number (aneuploidy) is present in most malignant tumours and has been attri...
Cancer cells frequently undergo chromosome missegregation events during mitosis, whereby the copies ...
Cancer cells frequently undergo chromosome missegregation events during mitosis, whereby the copies ...
Abstract Background Aneuploidy has long been recognized to be associated with cancer. A growing body...
Abstract Chromosome instability (CIN) has been associated with therapeutic resistance in many cancer...
<p>(A) Reported cytogenetic data from the Mitelman Database of Chromosome Aberrations and Gene Fusio...
Recent evidence suggests that a polyaneuploid cancer cell (PACC) state may play a key role in the ad...
Understanding the cellular mechanisms of tumour growth is key for designing rational anticancer trea...
Tumorigenesis in humans is thought to be a multistep process where certain mutations confer a select...
Unequal separation of the mother cells’ DNA over its two daughter cells upon cell division is a prev...
Cancer research needs to explain the observed incidence of cancer. Many factors determine this proce...