Exploring the Genomes of Cancer Cells: Progress and Promise
Top Cited Papers
- 25 March 2011
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 331 (6024), 1553-1558
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1204040
Abstract
The description and interpretation of genomic abnormalities in cancer cells have been at the heart of cancer research for more than a century. With exhaustive sequencing of cancer genomes across a wide range of human tumors well under way, we are now entering the end game of this mission. In the forthcoming decade, essentially complete catalogs of somatic mutations will be generated for tens of thousands of human cancers. Here, I provide an overview of what these efforts have revealed to date about the origin and behavioral features of cancer cells and how this genomic information is being exploited to improve diagnosis and therapy of the disease.Keywords
This publication has 70 references indexed in Scilit:
- Massive Genomic Rearrangement Acquired in a Single Catastrophic Event during Cancer DevelopmentCell, 2011
- Use of cancer‐specific genomic rearrangements to quantify disease burden in plasma from patients with solid tumorsGenes, Chromosomes and Cancer, 2010
- Signatures of mutation and selection in the cancer genomeNature, 2010
- Systematic sequencing of renal carcinoma reveals inactivation of histone modifying genesNature, 2010
- Complex landscapes of somatic rearrangement in human breast cancer genomesNature, 2009
- A comprehensive catalogue of somatic mutations from a human cancer genomeNature, 2009
- A small-cell lung cancer genome with complex signatures of tobacco exposureNature, 2009
- A screen of the complete protein kinase gene family identifies diverse patterns of somatic mutations in human breast cancerNature Genetics, 2005
- Mutations of the BRAF gene in human cancerNature, 2002
- The Hallmarks of CancerCell, 2000