Zoekresultaten - Kimberly C. Tuttle
- Toon 1 - 3 resultaten van 3
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1
α-Tubulin Acetylation Elevated in Metastatic and Basal-like Breast Cancer Cells Promotes Microtentacle Formation, Adhesion, and Invasive Migration door Amanda E. Boggs, Michele Vítolo, Rebecca A. Whipple, Monica S. Charpentier, Olga Goloubeva, Olga B. Ioffe, Kimberly C. Tuttle, Jana Slovic, Yiling Lu, Gordon B. Mills, Stuart S. Martin
Gepubliceerd in 2014Artigo -
2
Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition Promotes Tubulin Detyrosination and Microtentacles that Enhance Endothelial Engagement door Rebecca A. Whipple, Michael A. Matrone, Edward H. Cho, Eric M. Balzer, Michele Vítolo, Jennifer R. Yoon, Olga B. Ioffe, Kimberly C. Tuttle, Jing Yang, Stuart S. Martin
Gepubliceerd in 2010Artigo -
3
Metastatic breast tumors express increased tau, which promotes microtentacle formation and the reattachment of detached breast tumor cells door Michael A. Matrone, Rebecca A. Whipple, Keyata N. Thompson, Edward H. Cho, Michele Vítolo, Eric M. Balzer, Jennifer R. Yoon, Olga B. Ioffe, Kimberly C. Tuttle, Ming Tan, Stuart S. Martin
Gepubliceerd in 2010Artigo
Zoekinstrumenten:
Gerelateerde Onderwerpen
Biology
Biochemistry
Breast cancer
Cancer
Cancer research
Cell biology
Gene
Medicine
Metastasis
Metastatic breast cancer
Microtubule
Pathology
Primary tumor
Acetylation
Actin
Biotechnology
Cell
Chemistry
Circulating tumor cell
Cytoskeleton
Epithelial–mesenchymal transition
Genetics
In vivo
Internal medicine
Lymph node
Mesenchymal stem cell
Oncology
Transition (genetics)
Tubulin
Tumor progression