Stopping cancer cells from entering a soft biomechanical state could help the immune system clear dormant cancer metastasis.
New Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center research reveals how dormant metastatic cancer cells protect themselves from the immune system by changing their shape.
Cancer cells that have broken away from a primary tumor can lurk in the body for years in a dormant state, evading immune defenders and biding their time until conditions are ripe for establishing a ...
The field of cancer biology has witnessed rapid advances in our understanding of microRNAs (miRNAs) as crucial regulators of ...
New Study Reveals How Hypoxia Reprograms RNA Methylation to Promote Malignancy in Liver Cancer Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) ...
After being described in 2018, researchers knew they had something interesting with T3p, a single small RNA found in breast ...
Researchers have identified cancer-specific RNAs and employed machine learning models to use them as a blood-based biomarker ...
A mysterious RNA molecule found only in breast cancer led researchers on a six-year hunt that uncovered an entire hidden layer of cancer biology. The story began with T3p, a tiny RNA molecule found in ...
In Rochelle, a benefit was hosted to support Tony Milburn, a former firefighter and police dispatcher diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer.
New review reveals how non-genomic estrogen signaling undermines treatment response and fuels tumor progression Hormone receptor–positive breast ...
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