Johns Hopkins Medicine: Scientists Track 'Doubling' in Origin of Cancer Cells
May 03, 2024
May 03, 2024
BALTIMORE, Maryland, May 3 (TNSres) -- Johns Hopkins Medicine issued the following news release:
Working with human breast and lung cells, Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have charted a molecular pathway that can lure cells down a hazardous path of duplicating their genome too many times, a hallmark of cancer cells.
The findings, published May 3 in Science, reveal what goes wrong when a group of molecules and enzymes trigger and regulate what's known as . . .
Working with human breast and lung cells, Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists say they have charted a molecular pathway that can lure cells down a hazardous path of duplicating their genome too many times, a hallmark of cancer cells.
The findings, published May 3 in Science, reveal what goes wrong when a group of molecules and enzymes trigger and regulate what's known as . . .
