Cancer Genome Landscapes
Howard Hughes Medical Institute · Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
Abstract
Over the past decade, comprehensive sequencing efforts have revealed the genomic landscapes of common forms of human cancer. For most cancer types, this landscape consists of a small number of "mountains" (genes altered in a high percentage of tumors) and a much larger number of "hills" (genes altered infrequently). To date, these studies have revealed ~140 genes that, when altered by intragenic mutations, can promote or "drive" tumorigenesis. A typical tumor contains two to eight of these "driver gene" mutations; the remaining mutations are passengers that confer no selective growth advantage. Driver genes can be classified into 12 signaling pathways that regulate three core cellular processes: cell fate,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 246.99
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 157
Authors
6- BVBert VogelsteinCorresponding
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
- NPNickolas Papadopoulos
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
- VEVictor E. Velculescu
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
- SZShibin Zhou
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
- LALuis A. Díaz
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center
Topics & keywords
- Genome
- Gene
- Carcinogenesis
- Biology
- Cancer
- Genetics
- Computational biology
- Human genome
- Good health and well-being