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Showing posts with label hallmarks of cancer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hallmarks of cancer. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

free full access (pdf file) Cell - Hallmarks of Cancer: The Next Generation (published Mar 2011)



Hallmarks of Cancer: The Next Generation

Cell, Volume 144, Issue 5, 646-674, 4 March 2011
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
10.1016/j.cell.2011.02.013

Authors

Summary

The hallmarks of cancer comprise six biological capabilities acquired during the multistep development of human tumors. The hallmarks constitute an organizing principle for rationalizing the complexities of neoplastic disease. They include sustaining proliferative signaling, evading growth suppressors, resisting cell death, enabling replicative immortality, inducing angiogenesis, and activating invasion and metastasis. Underlying these hallmarks are genome instability, which generates the genetic diversity that expedites their acquisition, and inflammation, which fosters multiple hallmark functions. Conceptual progress in the last decade has added two emerging hallmarks of potential generality to this list—reprogramming of energy metabolism and evading immune destruction. In addition to cancer cells, tumors exhibit another dimension of complexity: they contain a repertoire of recruited, ostensibly normal cells that contribute to the acquisition of hallmark traits by creating the “tumor microenvironment.” Recognition of the widespread applicability of these concepts will increasingly affect the development of new means to treat human cancer

full free access: ScienceDirect - Cell : The Hallmarks of Cancer published Sept 2000




Cell
Volume 100, Issue 1, 7 January 2000, Pages 57-70

doi:10.1016/S0092-8674(00)81683-9 | How to Cite or Link Using DOI
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Review

The Hallmarks of Cancer
Douglas Hanahan 1 and Robert A. Weinberg 2
1 Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics and, Hormone Research Institute, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, California 94143, USA
2 Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research and, Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA

Available online 27 September 2000.

Article Outline

• An Enumeration of the Traits
• Acquired Capability: Self-Sufficiency in Growth Signals
• Acquired Capability: Insensitivity to Antigrowth Signals
• Acquired Capability: Evading Apoptosis
• Acquired Capability: Limitless Replicative Potential
• Acquired Capability: Sustained Angiogenesis
• Acquired Capability: Tissue Invasion and Metastasis
• An Enabling Characteristic: Genome Instability
• Alternative Pathways to Cancer
• Synthesis
• Acknowledgements
• References