Carcinogenesis is long-term multistep accumulation of defects of genes responsible for cell division, DNA repair, and apoptosis. The functions of these genes are known both for norm and for pathologies caused by their damage and resulting in "asocial" cell behavior. Owing to the recent progress in studying the mechanisms of carcinogenesis, some genetic defects may be considered from the applied point of view (as tumor markers rather than as pathogenetic factors) and employed in diagnostics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDNA fragments from apoptotic cells crossing the renal barrier retain their matrix functions, which allows PCR identification of mutant sequences in excreted DNA. We investigated the possibility of detecting k-ras mutations in urinary DNA of tumor patients (colon cancer). In some patients with k-ras codon 12 mutations in tumor cell DNA the same changes were detected in the urinary DNA.
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