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Colorectal cancer has a backup plan, and it begins when mature gut cells regain stem-like traits
In a recent study, Stevens researchers have shown how colorectal cancers can evolve from mature intestinal cells that revert ...
Colon cancer remains a major global health concern, ranking third among the most diagnosed cancers and the leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. One critical factor that makes treating ...
Since a landmark 2009 study, researchers have known that a common gut bacterium, Bacteroides fragilis, drives colon tumor formation, potentially leading to colorectal cancer, by secreting a toxin that ...
Since a landmark 2009 study, researchers have known that a common gut bacterium, Bacteroides fragilis, drives colon tumor formation, potentially leading to colorectal cancer, by secreting a toxin that ...
Share on Pinterest A new study suggests that targeting stem-like cancer cells could prevent colorectal cancer relapse. Image credit: VICTOR TORRES/Stocksy A study suggests that the protein BEX2 acts ...
A newly uncovered immune chain reaction in the gut may explain why people with inflammatory bowel disease face a much higher risk of colorectal cancer. Researchers found that a powerful inflammatory ...
The study positions BEX2 not simply as another cancer-associated molecule, but as a functional brake on the stem-like cell state that makes colorectal cancer harder to treat. By linking BEX2 to MCL1 ...
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