A new study shows how an anticancer drug triggers an "outside in" signal that gets it sucked into a cancer cell.
A new study shows how an anticancer drug triggers an "outside in" signal that gets it sucked into a cancer cell.
X-dimer. The researchers found that when the anti-cancer antibody binds to P-cadherin, it locks it into the X-dimer form. The stable X-form then triggers a chemical signal that causes that patch of ...
A new study shows how an anticancer drug triggers an “outside in” signal that gets it sucked into a cancer cell. The work, published Jan. 29 in Nature Communications, reveals ...
Each subunit of the dimer consists of a DNA-binding domain composed of an array of TALE repeats fused to the catalytically active portion of the FokI endonuclease. Upon DNA-binding of both TALEN arms ...