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Journal of Cell Science, Vol 87, Issue 3 383-388, Copyright © 1987 by Company of Biologists
JOURNAL ARTICLES |
H Harris and ME Bramwell
Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, Oxford, UK.
When malignant human cells are crossed with diploid human keratinocytes, malignancy, as defined by progressive growth in vivo, is suppressed so long as the hybrid cells continue to produce involucrin, a protein that characterizes terminal differentiation in the keratinocyte. When, on continued cultivation in vitro, the cells lose the ability to produce involucrin, they reacquire the ability to grow progressively in the animal.
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H Harris, J Rawlins, and J Sharps A different approach to tumour suppression. The Alexandra Kefalides Memorial Lecture J. Cell Sci., January 9, 1996; 109(9): 2189 - 2197. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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