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Bar-Joseph, Z., Siegfried, Z., Brandeis, Z.B., Brors, B., Lu, Y., Eils, R., Dynlacht, B.D. and Simon, I. (2008) Genome-Wide Transcriptional Analysis of the Human Cell Cycle Identifies Genes Differentially Regulated in Normal and Cancer Cells. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 105, 955-960.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0704723105
has been cited by the following article:
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TITLE:
Cancers in Children Ages 8 to 12 Are Injury-Related
AUTHORS:
Kirsten H. Walen
KEYWORDS:
Endomitosis, Endotetraploidization, Diplochromosomes, Reductive Division, Genomic Change, Proliferative Advantage, Wound Healing
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Cancer Therapy,
Vol.6 No.2,
February
9,
2015
ABSTRACT:
Cancers in young children in early
growing age was a short PBS (KQED) report (11/21/2014), but without
informational source, which prompted a Google search. Sports-associated
injuries with medical healing treatments concluded that there were no
association between these body traumas and cancer development. But there are
other activities from young children, such as “dare-devil” skateboard and
bicycling meter-high jumping with potential high energy falls, to serious
broken-bone injuries. Falls of children are among the most common causes of US
emergency response. The question is why bodily injury is associated with
cancer-development? An answer to this question was exemplified by osteosarcoma
in young children, which suggested that injury to growing points of bone and
surrounding soft tissue cells would elicit a repair process (wound healing
process) producing polyploidy with diplochromosomes. The non-mitotic reductive
division of such 4-chromatid chromosomes has been shownin vitroto produce pathological cancer-like
phenotypes, including gain of a proliferative advantage.