The APC Tumor Suppressor Pathway
Colon cancer is the second most common cause of cancer mortality among adults in the United States today (1 ). Colon cancer arises from a pathological transformation of the normal colonic epithelium to an adenomatous polyp, which can then progress to an invasive tumor. This progression is brought about by a number of genetic changes, which include the inactivation of tumor suppressor genes and activation of protooncogenes, the net result of which is to confer a proliferative advantage to the cancerous cell (2 ,3 ). These changes are best described in the colon cancer adenoma-carcinoma sequence model as outlined in Fig. 1 (4 ).
- Generation of Immortal Human Prostate Cell Lines for the Study of Prostate Cancer
- Isolation of Novel Markers for Hepatocellular Carcinoma by a Subtraction-Enhanced Display Technique
- Purification of Annexin V and Its Use in the Detection of Apoptotic Cells
- Lectin Array-Based Strategies for Identifying Metastasis-Associated Changes in Glycosylation
- Identification of Human Pancreatic Cancer Stem Cells
- Inflammation-Related Aberrant Patterns of DNA Methylation: Detection and Role in Epigenetic Deregulation of Cancer Cell Transcri
- Collagen Gel Droplet Culture Method to Examine In Vitro Chemosensitivity
- Mutational Analysis of the Androgen Receptor Using Laser Capture Microdissection and Direct Sequencing
- 細胞株構建新技術——IOS(Integration Operating System)
- Clinical Protocol for p53 Gene Therapy for Liver Tumors