Search for dissertations about: "s-phase checkpoint"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 18 swedish dissertations containing the words s-phase checkpoint.
-
1. Cell cycle regulation in cancer: A noncoding perspective
Abstract : The cell cycle progression is tightly regulated to ensure error-free cell replication. The complexity of the transcriptional machinery aids to function in a spatiotemporal pattern across different phases and genomic loci. READ MORE
-
2. dNTPs : the alphabet of life
Abstract : From microscopic bacteria to the giant whale, every single living organism on Earth uses the same language of life: DNA. Deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates––dNTPs (dATP, dTTP, dGTP, and dCTP)––are the building blocks of DNA and are therefore the “alphabet of life”. READ MORE
-
3. DNA precursor asymmetries, Mismatch Repair and their effect on mutation specificity
Abstract : In order to build any structure, a good supply of materials, accurate workers and quality control are needed. This is even the case when constructing DNA, the so-called “Code of Life.” For a species to continue to exist, this DNA code must be copied with incredibly high accuracy when each and every cell replicates. READ MORE
-
4. The Heterogenic Final Cell Cycle of Retinal Horizontal Cells
Abstract : The cell cycle is a highly complex process that is under the control of several pathways. Failure to regulate and/or complete the cell cycle often leads to cell cycle arrest, which may be followed by programmed cell death (apoptosis). One cell type that has a variety of unique cell cycle properties is the horizontal cell of the chicken retina. READ MORE
-
5. The role of RNA-binding motif 3 in epithelial ovarian cancer: A biomarker discovery approach
Abstract : Epithelial ovarian cancer (EOC) is the most lethal of all gynaecological malignancies and there is an urgent need to develop new prognostic and treatment predictive biomarkers for a more efficient therapy. The discovery of the RNA-binding motif protein 3 (RBM3) as a putative cancer biomarker was based on its differential expression in various cancer forms in the Human Protein Atlas (HPA). READ MORE