Oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes.
TL;DR: The artificial selection of the directly acting or acute RNA tumor viruses for high transforming ability has led to the isolation of defective retroviral genomes that have picked up, by accidental recombination, some of the important genes that influence, trigger or regulate cell division.
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Abstract: The artificial selection of the directly acting or acute RNA tumor viruses for high transforming ability has led to the isolation of defective retroviral genomes that have picked up, by accidental recombination, some of the important genes that influence, trigger or regulate cell division. These genes belong to at least four functionally different groups. Each of them can contribute to tumor development and/or progression after activation by structural or regulatory changes. Growth factor genes may act as oncogenes following constitutive activation in a cell that normally responds to, but does not produce, the corresponding growth factor (the autocrine model, exemplified by sis). Growth factor receptors may be fixed in a state of continuous, faulty signalling by the truncation of their external, ligand binding portion (examples: erb-B, fms). Genes coding for proteins involved in signal transduction may be activated by point mutations in certain, important domains (example: the ras-family). DNA binding pro...
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Citations
Current Issues and Tasks of Genetic Cancer Nursing in Korea
TL;DR: Kim et al. as mentioned in this paper introduced how the Korean Society of Genetic Nursing (KSGN) has evolved and tried to translate genomic knowledge to nursing practice, and then suggested the future role of genetic nurses in Korea.
The Basic Molecular Genetics and the Common Mutations of Brain Tumors
Handan Kayhan
- 01 Jan 2020
TL;DR: Cancer-causing mutations with their classification patterns and some common mutations such as 1p/19q codeletion, IDH, BRAF, p53, ATRX, TERT, PTEN, EGfr, CDKN2A, EGFR, and H3F3A that may help to cause brain tumors was discussed in this chapter.
Hereditary Cancers and Genetics
Daniele Fanale,Laura Ottini,Enrico Ricevuto,Valerio Gristina,Valentina Calò,Lorena Incorvaia,Antonio Russo,Ettore Capoluongo,Viviana Bazan +8 more
- 01 Jan 2021
TL;DR: The identification of individuals with a hereditary risk of cancer is based on an accurate reconstruction of their personal and family clinical history as discussed by the authors, which can be schematically divided into three main categories: gatekeepers, caretakers, and landscapers.
Scylla and Charybdis: Adaptationism, Reductionism, and the Fallacy of Equating Race with Disease
Joseph L. Graves
- 01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: In the Odyssey of Homer, the goddess Circe gives Odysseus instructions to aid him in his journey home as mentioned in this paper, and he is warned that only one sea road can take him to Ithaca.
Cytogenetic analysis in the diagnosis of acute leukemia.
Sverre Heim,Felix Mitelman +1 more
TL;DR: The finding of an acquired clonal chromosomal abnormality in hematopoietic cells identifies the presence of a neoplastic disease and the aberration profile may reveal whether the patient has ALL or ANLL and which subtype it is.
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TL;DR: The isolation of a complementary DNA segment that detects a chromosomal segment having the properties of the gene at this locus is described, which is expressed in many tumour types, but no RNA transcript has been found in retinoblastomas and osteosarcomas.
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TL;DR: Six peptides derived from the human epidermal growth factor receptor very closely matches a part of the deduced sequence of the v-erb-B transforming protein of avian erythroblastosis virus (AEV).
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TL;DR: Transgenic mice bearing the cellular myc oncogene coupled to the immunoglobulin μ or κ enhancer frequently develop a fatal lymphoma within a few months of birth and constitutive c-myc expression appears to be highly leukaemogenic at several stages of B-cell maturation.
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