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Klijn, C. (author), Koudijs, M.J. (author), Kool, J. (author), Ten Hoeve, J. (author), Boer, M. (author), De Moes, J. (author), Akhtar, W. (author), Van Miltenburg, M. (author), Vendel-Zwaagstra, A. (author), Reinders, M.J.T. (author), Adams, D.J. (author), Van Lohuizen, M. (author), Hilkens, J. (author), Wessels, L.F.A. (author), Jonkers, J. (author)
Cancer develops through a multistep process in which normal cells progress to malignant tumors via the evolution of their genomes as a result of the acquisition of mutations in cancer driver genes. The number, identity and mode of action of cancer driver genes, and how they contribute to tumor evolution is largely unknown. This study deployed...
journal article 2013
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De Ronde, J.J. (author), Klijn, C. (author), Velds, A. (author), Holstege, H. (author), Reinders, M.J.T. (author), Jonkers, J. (author), Wessels, L.F.A. (author)
Background: Most approaches used to find recurrent or differential DNA Copy Number Alterations (CNA) in array Comparative Genomic Hybridization (aCGH) data from groups of tumour samples depend on the discretization of the aCGH data to gain, loss or no-change states. This causes loss of valuable biological information in tumour samples, which are...
journal article 2010
document
Klijn, C. (author), Bot, J. (author), Adams, D.J. (author), Reinders, M. (author), Wessels, L. (author), Jonkers, J. (author)
Tumorigenesis is a multi-step process in which normal cells transform into malignant tumors following the accumulation of genetic mutations that enable them to evade the growth control checkpoints that would normally suppress their growth or result in apoptosis. It is therefore important to identify those combinations of mutations that...
journal article 2010
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Klijn, C.N. (author), Holstege, H. (author), De Ridder, J. (author), Liu, X. (author), Reinders, M. (author), Jonkers, J. (author), Wessels, L. (author)
Tumor formation is in part driven by DNA copy number alterations (CNAs), which can be measured using microarray-based Comparative Genomic Hybridization (aCGH). Multiexperiment analysis of aCGH data from tumors allows discovery of recurrent CNAs that are potentially causal to cancer development. Until now, multiexperiment aCGH data analysis has...
journal article 2008
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