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How stomach cancer learns to grow on its own
Gastric (stomach) cancer remains one of the most common and deadly cancers in East Asia, including Korea. Yet despite its high prevalence, it has received far less molecular attention than colorectal ...
Being overweight or obese has long been linked to a greater risk of developing or dying from breast cancer. New research suggests a reason: Certain breast cancer tumors may feed on neighboring fat ...
Breast cancer can spread—or metastasize—to many different parts of the body, but it's not well understood why tumors grow ...
Researchers from the Cancer Research UK Scotland Institute in Glasgow have discovered why certain cancer-causing genes ...
A study led by researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center found that normal cells surrounding a tumor, known as cancer-associated ...
A protein once thought to simply help cancer cells avoid death turns out to do much more. MCL1 actively drives cancer metabolism by controlling the powerful mTOR growth pathway, tying survival and ...
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Molecular switch lets cancer cells dodge death
Cancer’s deadliest talent is not rapid growth but the ability to sidestep the internal programs that should make damaged cells self-destruct. Across multiple labs, researchers are now converging on a ...
The most common cancer-causing strain of human papillomavirus (HPV), HPV16, undermines the body’s defenses by reprogramming immune cells surrounding the tumor, according to new research from the Keck ...
Small cell lung cancer cells that metastasize to the brain cozy up to neurons and form working electrical connections, called synapses, according to an upcoming study led by Stanford Medicine ...
Researchers found in mice that multiple nutrients and cancer cell characteristics work together to control the spread of ...
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