Search results for " Oncogenesis"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Hormone Involvement in Tissue Development, Physiology and Oncogenesis: A Preface to the Special Issue

2020

Hormones, i.e., the products of specialized endocrine cells which spread throughout the body via the bloodstream, control the normal development and growth of organisms at the embryo-fetal stage and, in adult life, regulate, integrate, and coordinate a range of different physiological processes which concern virtually all body tissues. They exert their biological effects by interacting with either surface or intracellular receptors, thereby activating signalization pathways [1]. For example, steroid hormones, such as those released by the adrenal glands, testes and ovaries, once freely crossed through the plasmalemma, bind to receptors that act as ligand-dependent transcriptional regulators…

0301 basic medicineCancer Researchbusiness.industrylcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensmedicine.disease_causeBioinformaticslcsh:RC254-282hormones development physiology oncogenesis03 medical and health sciencesEditorialn/a030104 developmental biology0302 clinical medicineOncology030220 oncology & carcinogenesismedicineSettore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E CitologiaCarcinogenesisbusinessHormoneCancers
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Female-specific association among I, J and K mitochondrial genetic haplogroups and cancer:A longitudinal cohort study

2018

Recent studies highlighted the role of mitochondrial dysregulation in cancer, suggesting that the different mitochondrial haplogroups might play a role in tumorigenesis and risk of cancer development. Our aim is to investigate whether any mitochondrial haplogroups carried a significant higher risk of cancer development in a large prospective cohort of North American people. The haplogroup assignment was performed by a combination of sequencing and PCR-RFLP techniques. Our specific outcome of interest was the incidence of any cancer during follow-up period. Overall, 3222 participants were included in the analysis. Women having I, J, K haplogroup reported a significant higher incidence of can…

0301 basic medicineOncologyCancer Researchmedicine.medical_specialtygenetic structuresBiologymedicine.disease_causeDNA MitochondrialHaplogroupHaplogroupArticleCohort Studies03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal medicineNeoplasmsGeneticsmedicineHumansGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseLongitudinal StudiesLongitudinal cohortProspective cohort studyMolecular BiologyOncogenesisCancerCancer Screening Oncogenesis Mitochondrial HaplogroupIncidence (epidemiology)Cancermedicine.diseaseeye diseaseshumanitiesMitochondrial030104 developmental biologyHaplotypes030220 oncology & carcinogenesisScreeningCancer; Haplogroup; Mitochondrial; Oncogenesis; ScreeningFemaleCancer developmentCarcinogenesis
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