воскресенье, 4 марта 2012 г.

Distinctive Genetic Program Guides Breast Cancer's Deadly Spread.

Byline: Howard Hughes Medical Institute

CHEVY CHASE, Md., June 25 (AScribe Newswire) -- Researchers have peered inside breast cancer's toolbox and identified a set of rogue genes that accelerates the spread of cancer from its primary site in the breast to a secondary location in bone marrow. The genes identified by the scientists are distinct from those that spawn the initial tumor, which invites speculation about whether different cancers bear unique "gene expression signatures" that increase the probability that a cancer will spread in a process called metastasis.

Metastasis occurs when cells from a primary tumor break off and invade another organ. It is the deadliest transformation that a cancer can undergo, and therefore researchers have been looking for specific genes that propel metastasis. If they can identify distinctive metastatic gene programs for different cancers, it may be possible to …

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