Articles Written by:    ESTELLER M.     

« Previous  |  Next »

Impaired recruitment of the histone methyltransferase DOT1L contributes to the incomplete reactivation of tumor suppressor genes upon DNA demethylation

-- cannot be found in the Handle System. Possible reasons for the error are: the DOI has not been created the DOI is cited incorrectly in your source the DOI does not resolve due to a system problem If you believe you have requested a DOI that should ...

From M ESTELLER, Nature.com,  6 Jul 2009

Identification of (1H)-pyrroles as histone deacetylase inhibitors with antitumoral activity

Histone deacetylases (HDACs) play a key role in the regulation of gene expression and chromatin structure, and drugs targeting these enzymes might have an important impact in the treatment of human cancer. Herein, we report the characterization of (1H)- ...

From M ESTELLER, Nature.com,  26 Jan 2009

REVIEW ARTICLE: Molecular Origins of Cancer: Epigenetics in Cancer

Since this article has no abstract, we have provided an extract of the first 100 words of the full text and any section headings. Classic genetics alone cannot explain the diversity of phenotypes within a population. Nor does classic genetics ...

From ESTELLER, M., New England Journal of Medicine -- Recent Issues,  12 Mar 2008

Transforming pathways unleashed by a HDAC2 mutation in human cancer

Although disruption of histone modification patterns is a common hallmark of human cancer, our knowledge of the mechanistic role of histone-modifying enzymes in its generation is very limited. We have recently identified an inactivating mutation in the ...

From M ESTELLER, Nature.com,  11 Feb 2008

Unmasking of epigenetically silenced candidate tumor suppressor genes by removal of methyl-CpG-binding domain proteins

Methyl-cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG)-binding domain (MBD) proteins are bound to hypermethylated promoter CpG islands of tumor suppressor genes in human cancer cells, although a direct causal relationship at the genome-wide level between MBD presence ...

From M ESTELLER, Nature.com,  28 Jan 2008

« Previous  |  Next »

Who is This?

Help us add to our database, by linking this writer their entry in Wikipedia or Source Watch, or by suggesting that we remove it from our index.

Suggest an Entry

Enter a url from sourcewatch.org or wikipedia.org:


recommend removal

close