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  • Book
    Dong-Young Noh, Wonshik Han, Masakazu Toi, editors.
    Summary: This book describes recent advances in translational research in breast cancer and presents emerging applications of this research that promise to have meaningful impacts on diagnosis and treatment. It introduces ideas and materials derived from the clinic that have been brought to "the bench" for basic research, as well as findings that have been applied back to "the bedside". Detailed attention is devoted to breast cancer biology and cell signaling pathways and to cancer stem cell and tumor heterogeneity in breast cancer. Various patient-derived research models are discussed, and a further focus is the role of biomarkers in precision medicine for breast cancer patients. Next-generation clinical research receives detailed attention, addressing the increasingly important role of big data in breast cancer research and a wide range of other emerging developments. An entire section is also devoted to the management of women with high-risk breast cancer. Translational Research in Breast Cancer will help clinicians and scientists to optimize their collaboration in order to achieve the common goal of conquering breast cancer.
    Digital Access Springer 2021
  • Article
    Wurtz M, Jacobson RJ, Steven AC, Rosenbusch JP.
    Eur J Biochem. 1978 Aug 01;88(2):593-7.
    Homogeneous protein synthesis elongation factor Tu from Escherichia coli forms aggregates at high concentrations of ammonium sulfate which have a filamentous appearance in the light microscope. Electron microscopy of negatively stained preparations shows that these aggregates are paracrystalline, including three different forms. On the basis of analyses by optical diffraction, this polymorphism can be explained in terms of three different tubular foldings of the same basic two-dimensional surface lattice. This can be compared with that underlying the structure of actin filaments, thus providing a crucial test of the putative relationship between the elongation factor and actin [Rosenbusch, J. P. et al. (1976) J. Supramol. Struct. 5, 391-396]. The differences between the surface lattices, in conjunction with the negative results of sensitive immunochemical tests for possible cross-reactivities between the two proteins, suggest that any such relationship is very remote.
    Digital Access Access Options