The discovery could pave the way for a groundbreaking RNA-based multi-cancer treatment. Alternative RNA splicing functions ...
Cells have a natural editing system that allows them to rearrange genetic instructions to create different proteins from the ...
However, when cancer rewrites the script ... see if they could increase the inclusion of the poison exon in the TRA2β gene ...
A study reveals how cancer disrupts RNA splicing and presents a potential therapy using antisense oligonucleotides to target ...
Synthetic ‘kill switch’ could fast track new immunotherapies, turning bacterial armies against cancer tumours, study shows.
Scientists from The Jackson Laboratory and UConn Health found that cancer cells disrupt poison exons, leading to tumor growth ...
Researchers have discovered that cancer cells suppress 'poison exons' -- genetic elements that act as an off switch for protein production -- in a key gene called TRA2 , promoting tumor growth. By ...