Morning Overview on MSN
Why cancer returns years later, and how we can stop it
Cancer’s cruelest trick is its ability to disappear, only to reappear years later in a new organ or a familiar scar. The fear ...
Researchers are targeting dormant tumour cells that might explain why some cancers reappear long after successful treatment.
Researchers at The Institute of Cancer Research, London identified the CIP2A–TOPBP1 complex as a master regulator of DNA repair during mitosis, coordinating backup pathways that protect chromosomes ...
A hidden clue may explain why some mutated cells become cancerous and others don’t: how fast they divide. A new study from researchers at Sinai Health in Toronto reveals that the total time it takes ...
Hosted on MSN
A starting signal for cell division: Molecular switch ensures that cells divide at the right time
About 100 cells divide every second in our body. A key protein in cell division is a protein kinase termed Plk1, because it activates other proteins involved in this process. Plk1 is also ...
Left: Normal cell division with the chromosomes (blue) lined up and ready to be pulled into two separate daughter cells by the two centrosomes (green). Right: In faulty cell division, too many ...
This week we have selected a recent article from The Conversation contributed by Dr Francesco Crea, a clinician and research ...
Researchers created a new kind of cancer drug that can grab a mutant protein while also carrying a second hit against the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results