Molecular Analysis of Cancer: An Overview
Cancer is a complex disease occurring as a result of a progressive accumulation of genetic aberrations and epigenetic changes that enable escape from normal cellular and environmental controls (1 ). Neoplastic cells may have numerous acquired genetic abnormalities including aneuploidy, chromosomal rearrangements, amplifications, deletions, gene rearrangements, and loss-offunction or gain-of-function mutations. Recent studies have also highlighted the importance of epigenetic alterations of certain genes that result in the inactivation of their functions in some human cancers. These aberrations lead to the abnormal behavior common to all neoplastic cells: dysregulated growth, lack of contact inhibition, genomic instability, and propensity for metastasis.
- Autoantibodies Against Cancer Antigens
- Multiplex Amplifiable Probe Hybridization (MAPH) Methodology as an Alternative to Comparative Genomic Hybridization (CGH)
- Mutation Analysis of Cancer Using Automated Sequencing
- The Polymerase Chain Reaction
- A Molecular Technique Useful in the Detection of Occult Metastases in Patients with Melanoma: RT-PCR Analysis of Sentinel Lymph
- Analysis of Alterations in a Base-Excision Repair Gene in Lung Cancer
- 細(xì)胞株構(gòu)建新技術(shù)——IOS(Integration Operating System)
- Nonviral Jet-Injection Technology for Intratumoral In Vivo Gene Transfer of Naked DNA
- Measuring Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Activity
- 電穿孔