All in the Stroma: Cancer's Cosa Nostra

After focusing for decades on what happens within tumor cells to make them go wrong, biologists are turning to the tumor environment and finding a network of coconspirators

Cancer biologists have recently been coming to grips with the fact that tumor cells get a lot of help from the cells around them. Such collusion is not the source of disease: More than 30 years of research have shown that mutations in a cell's own DNA initiate the changes that put it on its destructive path. But "people are realizing that the tumor environment is a coconspirator," says Zena Werb of the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). ... Full Story »

Posted by Beth Wellington
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Subjects: Health
Topics: Cancer
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Posted by: Posted by Beth Wellington - Apr 5, 2008 - 11:55 AM PDT
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Edited by: Beth Wellington - Apr 5, 2008 - 11:57 AM PDT

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Beth Wellington
4.7
by Beth Wellington - Oct. 1, 2008

A rundown of recent research about cancer is informative and easy to understand. NOTE: Dwight, I'm sorry that this was a paid article, as in Gerard's case, I was at a university which had a sub and thus had no way of knowing that the article wasn't available to the public until you so advised me.

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Dwight Rousu
3.0
by Dwight Rousu - Oct. 1, 2008

Requires paid access to read; no review from me.

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Gerard Barberi
4.6
by Gerard Barberi - Oct. 1, 2008

EDIT: I noticed my review received a poor rating from another member. It's understandable. Although, I was not aware that this was a paid subscription site. I have a proxy script loaded in my browser and the request for the article from this domain was bounced off my university's servers. I don't have paid access; my campus does.

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