© 2001 by Oxford University Press
Journal of the National Cancer Institute, Vol. 93, No. 18, 1363,
September 19, 2001
© 2001 Oxford University Press
IN THIS ISSUE |
Studies of differential gene expression in metastatic cells with high versus low invasive activity may help identify genes associated with metastasis. Shih et al. (p. 1392) used microarray technology to select CRMP-1, a gene whose expression is inversely associated with the invasive activity of cancer cells. They found that, when the CRMP-1 gene was transfected into highly invasive cells and then overexpressed, transfected cells had lower invasive activity than untransfected cells. CRMP-1 protein was distributed uniformly in the cytoplasm in interphase cells, but in mitotic cells, CRMP-1 was associated with mitotic spindles
Hip Replacements and Cancer
Measurements of Childhood Brain Tumors
EGFR Signaling and the Invasive Phenotype
Allelic Variation in UGT1A7 and Orolaryngeal Cancer Risk
Fluorescence Versus White-Light Bronchoscopy