Murine models of osteosarcoma: A piece of the translational puzzle
暂无分享,去创建一个
T. Martin | M. Walia | Carl R Walkley | A. Mutsaers | Wilson Castillo-Tandazo | T. Martin | Mannu K. Walia | T. Martin
[1] Daniel Baumhoer,et al. Recurrent mutation of IGF signalling genes and distinct patterns of genomic rearrangement in osteosarcoma , 2017, Nature Communications.
[2] A. Chalk,et al. Author response: Activation of PTHrP-cAMP-CREB1 signaling following p53 loss is essential for osteosarcoma initiation and maintenance , 2016 .
[3] A. Chalk,et al. Increased miR-155-5p and reduced miR-148a-3p contribute to the suppression of osteosarcoma cell death , 2016, Oncogene.
[4] P. Campbell,et al. Unscrambling the genomic chaos of osteosarcoma reveals extensive transcript fusion, recurrent rearrangements and frequent novel TP53 aberrations , 2015, Oncotarget.
[5] S. Molyneux,et al. RANKL blockade prevents and treats aggressive osteosarcomas , 2015, Science Translational Medicine.
[6] Florian Engert,et al. Exome sequencing of osteosarcoma reveals mutation signatures reminiscent of BRCA deficiency , 2015, Nature Communications.
[7] D. Branstetter,et al. RANK and RANK ligand expression in primary human osteosarcoma , 2015, Journal of bone oncology.
[8] B. Dawson,et al. RECQL4 Regulates p53 Function In Vivo During Skeletogenesis , 2015, Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
[9] Natalie K. Wolf,et al. A Sleeping Beauty forward genetic screen identifies new genes and pathways driving osteosarcoma development and metastasis , 2015, Nature Genetics.
[10] A. Chalk,et al. BET inhibitors induce apoptosis through a MYC independent mechanism and synergise with CDK inhibitors to kill osteosarcoma cells , 2015, Scientific Reports.
[11] Aude I. Ségaliny,et al. Preclinical mouse models of osteosarcoma. , 2015, BoneKEy reports.
[12] Elizabeth Stewart,et al. Systematic screening identifies dual PI3K and mTOR inhibition as a conserved 2 therapeutic vulnerability in osteosarcoma 3 , 2015 .
[13] T. Martin,et al. The DNA Helicase Recql4 Is Required for Normal Osteoblast Expansion and Osteosarcoma Formation , 2015, PLoS genetics.
[14] W. Sung,et al. TP53 intron 1 hotspot rearrangements are specific to sporadic osteosarcoma and can cause Li-Fraumeni syndrome , 2015, Oncotarget.
[15] A. Pappo,et al. Pediatric solid tumor genomics and developmental pliancy , 2015, Oncogene.
[16] T. Martin,et al. PTHrP, its receptor, and protein kinase A activation in osteosarcoma , 2014, Molecular & cellular oncology.
[17] Adam Kiezun,et al. Complementary genomic approaches highlight the PI3K/mTOR pathway as a common vulnerability in osteosarcoma , 2014, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[18] Kevin B. Jones,et al. The impact of osteoblastic differentiation on osteosarcomagenesis in the mouse , 2014, Oncogene.
[19] B. Dawson,et al. Notch activation as a driver of osteogenic sarcoma. , 2014, Cancer cell.
[20] A. Chalk,et al. The Rothmund-Thomson syndrome helicase RECQL4 is essential for hematopoiesis. , 2014, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[21] A. Chalk,et al. Knockdown of PTHR1 in osteosarcoma cells decreases invasion and growth and increases tumor differentiation in vivo , 2014, Oncogene.
[22] Carl R Walkley,et al. Cells of origin in osteosarcoma: mesenchymal stem cells or osteoblast committed cells? , 2014, Bone.
[23] L. Attardi,et al. Unravelling mechanisms of p53-mediated tumour suppression , 2014, Nature Reviews Cancer.
[24] Li Ding,et al. Recurrent somatic structural variations contribute to tumorigenesis in pediatric osteosarcoma. , 2014, Cell reports.
[25] J. Bradner,et al. Selective inhibition of BET bromodomain epigenetic signalling interferes with the bone-associated tumour vicious cycle , 2014, Nature Communications.
[26] K. Lindblad-Toh,et al. Genome-wide analyses implicate 33 loci in heritable dog osteosarcoma, including regulatory variants near CDKN2A/B , 2013, Genome Biology.
[27] A. Chalk,et al. Modeling distinct osteosarcoma subtypes in vivo using Cre:lox and lineage-restricted transgenic shRNA. , 2013, Bone.
[28] David M. Thomas,et al. Genome-wide Association Study Identifies Two Susceptibility Loci for Osteosarcoma , 2013, Nature Genetics.
[29] S. Lessnick,et al. Children's Oncology Group's 2013 blueprint for research: Bone tumors , 2013, Pediatric blood & cancer.
[30] Carl R Walkley,et al. Genetically engineered mouse models and human osteosarcoma , 2012, Clinical Sarcoma Research.
[31] Paul A Meyers,et al. Outcome for adolescent and young adult patients with osteosarcoma , 2012, Cancer.
[32] L. Mccauley,et al. Twenty‐five years of PTHrP progress: From cancer hormone to multifunctional cytokine , 2012, Journal of bone and mineral research : the official journal of the American Society for Bone and Mineral Research.
[33] A. Børresen-Dale,et al. Mutational Processes Molding the Genomes of 21 Breast Cancers , 2012, Cell.
[34] P. Kostenuik,et al. Bench to bedside: elucidation of the OPG–RANK–RANKL pathway and the development of denosumab , 2012, Nature Reviews Drug Discovery.
[35] Charles P. Lin,et al. Endogenous bone marrow MSCs are dynamic, fate-restricted participants in bone maintenance and regeneration. , 2012, Cell stem cell.
[36] R. Khokha,et al. Homotypic RANK signaling differentially regulates proliferation, motility and cell survival in osteosarcoma and mammary epithelial cells , 2012, Journal of Cell Science.
[37] R. Young,et al. BET Bromodomain Inhibition as a Therapeutic Strategy to Target c-Myc , 2011, Cell.
[38] Dong Ho Kim,et al. RANKL expression is related to treatment outcome of patients with localized, high‐grade osteosarcoma , 2011, Pediatric blood & cancer.
[39] D. Hanahan,et al. Hallmarks of Cancer: The Next Generation , 2011, Cell.
[40] N. Carter,et al. Massive Genomic Rearrangement Acquired in a Single Catastrophic Event during Cancer Development , 2011, Cell.
[41] K. Janeway,et al. Modeling human osteosarcoma in the mouse: From bedside to bench. , 2010, Bone.
[42] H. Saya,et al. c-MYC overexpression with loss of Ink4a/Arf transforms bone marrow stromal cells into osteosarcoma accompanied by loss of adipogenesis , 2010, Oncogene.
[43] T. Triche,et al. Prkar1a is an osteosarcoma tumor suppressor that defines a molecular subclass in mice. , 2010, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[44] K. Janeway,et al. Sequelae of osteosarcoma medical therapy: a review of rare acute toxicities and late effects. , 2010, The Lancet. Oncology.
[45] P. Lin,et al. Targeted mutation of p53 and Rb in mesenchymal cells of the limb bud produces sarcomas in mice. , 2009, Carcinogenesis.
[46] Salvatore Oliviero,et al. Histone Crosstalk between H3S10ph and H4K16ac Generates a Histone Code that Mediates Transcription Elongation , 2009, Cell.
[47] L. Mirabello,et al. Osteosarcoma incidence and survival rates from 1973 to 2004 , 2009, Cancer.
[48] R. Hennekam,et al. The mutation spectrum in RECQL4 diseases , 2009, European Journal of Human Genetics.
[49] M. Bouxsein,et al. Metastatic osteosarcoma induced by inactivation of Rb and p53 in the osteoblast lineage , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[50] F. Alt,et al. Conditional mouse osteosarcoma, dependent on p53 loss and potentiated by loss of Rb, mimics the human disease. , 2008, Genes & development.
[51] H. Xu,et al. Molecular recognition of parathyroid hormone by its G protein-coupled receptor , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[52] Brendan H. Lee,et al. Dimorphic effects of Notch signaling in bone homeostasis , 2008, Nature Medicine.
[53] Tatsuya Kobayashi,et al. Notch signaling maintains bone marrow mesenchymal progenitors by suppressing osteoblast differentiation , 2008, Nature Medicine.
[54] A. Huvos,et al. Over‐expression of parathyroid hormone Type 1 receptor confers an aggressive phenotype in osteosarcoma , 2007, International journal of cancer.
[55] S. Orkin,et al. Rb Regulates Interactions between Hematopoietic Stem Cells and Their Bone Marrow Microenvironment , 2007, Cell.
[56] David M. Thomas,et al. Molecular pathogenesis of osteosarcoma. , 2007, DNA and cell biology.
[57] S. Morrison,et al. Pten dependence distinguishes haematopoietic stem cells from leukaemia-initiating cells , 2006, Nature.
[58] Stephen N. Jones,et al. Osteoblast differentiation and skeletal development are regulated by Mdm2–p53 signaling , 2006, The Journal of cell biology.
[59] T. Martin,et al. Osteoblast-derived PTHrP is a physiological regulator of bone formation. , 2005, The Journal of clinical investigation.
[60] E. Zackai,et al. Association between osteosarcoma and deleterious mutations in the RECQL4 gene in Rothmund-Thomson syndrome. , 2003, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[61] S. Orkin,et al. Highly penetrant, rapid tumorigenesis through conditional inversion of the tumor suppressor gene Snf5. , 2002, Cancer cell.
[62] J. Vahle,et al. Skeletal Changes in Rats Given Daily Subcutaneous Injections of Recombinant Human Parathyroid Hormone (1-34) for 2 Years and Relevance to Human Safety , 2002, Toxicologic pathology.
[63] H. Jüppner,et al. Molecular properties of the PTH/PTHrP receptor , 2001, Trends in Endocrinology & Metabolism.
[64] Dale E. Jarka,et al. Osteochondromyxoma of Bone: A Congenital Tumor Associated With Lentigines and Other Unusual Disorders , 2001, The American journal of surgical pathology.
[65] C. Stratakis,et al. Mutations of the gene encoding the protein kinase A type I-α regulatory subunit in patients with the Carney complex , 2000, Nature Genetics.
[66] Robert W. Miller,et al. Mutations in RECQL4 cause a subset of cases of Rothmund-Thomson syndrome , 1999, Nature Genetics.
[67] J. Gusella,et al. The NF2 gene and merlin protein in human osteosarcomas , 1998, Neurogenetics.
[68] T. Jacks,et al. Mice heterozygous for a mutation at the Nf2 tumor suppressor locus develop a range of highly metastatic tumors. , 1998, Genes & development.
[69] E. Wagner,et al. c-fos-induced osteosarcoma formation in transgenic mice: cooperativity with c-jun and the role of endogenous c-fos. , 1995, Cancer research.
[70] M Aguet,et al. Inducible gene targeting in mice , 1995, Science.
[71] R. Weinberg,et al. Tumor spectrum analysis in p53-mutant mice , 1994, Current Biology.
[72] M. Merino,et al. Activating mutations of the stimulatory G protein in the McCune-Albright syndrome. , 1991, The New England journal of medicine.
[73] M. Freeman,et al. A G protein-linked receptor for parathyroid hormone and parathyroid hormone-related peptide. , 1991, Science.
[74] L. Strong,et al. Germ line p53 mutations in a familial syndrome of breast cancer, sarcomas, and other neoplasms. , 1990, Science.
[75] E. Chen,et al. A parathyroid hormone-related protein implicated in malignant hypercalcemia: cloning and expression. , 1987, Science.
[76] Stephen H. Friend,et al. A human DNA segment with properties of the gene that predisposes to retinoblastoma and osteosarcoma , 1986, Nature.
[77] A. Brøgger,et al. Osteosarcoma and retinoblastoma: a shared chromosomal mechanism revealing recessive predisposition. , 1985, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[78] T. Martin,et al. Parathyroid hormone-responsive adenylate cyclase in induced transplantable osteogenic rat sarcoma , 1976, Nature.
[79] J. Fraumeni,et al. Soft-tissue sarcomas, breast cancer, and other neoplasms. A familial syndrome? , 1969, Annals of internal medicine.
[80] K. Lindblad-Toh,et al. Genome-wide analyses implicate 33 loci in heritable dog osteosarcoma , including regulatory variants near CDKN 2 A / B , 2013 .