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Showing 1–7 of 7 results
Advanced filters: Author: Jacqueline M Tabler Clear advanced filters
  • How the bones of the skull vault expand to cover the brain is poorly understood. Here, the authors demonstrate that such bones grow through a mechanical feedback mechanism that propagates a wave of differentiation and emergent cell motion.

    • Yiteng Dang
    • Johanna Lattner
    • Jacqueline M. Tabler
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-11
  • John Wallingford and colleagues combine proteomics, in vivo imaging and genetic analyses to identify a new ciliopathy-associated protein module, which they call CPLANE. They show that CPLANE proteins, which include Fuzzy, Inturned and Wdpcp, interact with Jbts17 at basal bodies, where they act to recruit a specific subset of intraflagellar transport proteins.

    • Michinori Toriyama
    • Chanjae Lee
    • John B Wallingford
    Research
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 48, P: 648-656
  • The Cancer Genome Atlas Network describe their multifaceted analyses of primary breast cancers, shedding light on breast cancer heterogeneity; although only three genes (TP53, PIK3CA and GATA3) are mutated at a frequency greater than 10% across all breast cancers, numerous subtype-associated and novel mutations were identified.

    • Daniel C. Koboldt
    • Robert S. Fulton
    • Jacqueline D. Palchik
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 490, P: 61-70
  • The Cancer Genome Atlas reports on molecular evaluation of 295 primary gastric adenocarcinomas and proposes a new classification of gastric cancers into 4 subtypes, which should help with clinical assessment and trials of targeted therapies.

    • Adam J. Bass
    • Vesteinn Thorsson
    • Jia Liu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 513, P: 202-209
  • This paper reports integrative molecular analyses of urothelial bladder carcinoma at the DNA, RNA, and protein levels performed as part of The Cancer Genome Atlas project; recurrent mutations were found in 32 genes, including those involved in cell-cycle regulation, chromatin regulation and kinase signalling pathways; chromatin regulatory genes were more frequently mutated in urothelial carcinoma than in any other common cancer studied so far.

    • John N. Weinstein
    • Rehan Akbani
    • Greg Eley
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 507, P: 315-322
  • An integrative genomic analysis of several hundred endometrial carcinomas shows that a minority of tumour samples carry copy number alterations or TP53 mutations and many contain key cancer-related gene mutations, such as those involved in canonical pathways and chromatin remodelling; a reclassification of endometrial tumours into four distinct types is proposed, which may have an effect on patient treatment regimes.

    • Douglas A. Levine
    • Gad Getz
    • Douglas A. Levine
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 497, P: 67-73