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(CIT): Skeletal Complications of Malignancy will address the pathophysiology of the special forms of bone disease that occur in breast cancer, prostate cancer and multiple myeloma and the role of the bone marrow microenvironment in supporting bone metastases. Recent data show significant new information on the molecular mechanisms responsible for the effects of these different malignancies on the skeleton, and are providing novel and exciting potential targets for innovative drug therapies. These new findings will be presented by the international experts with updates on preclinical and clinical studies of currently utilized therapeutic agents. The symposium is designed for basic scientists and clinicians with interest in oncology, urology, hematology, and bone metabolism.
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Video Length: 24866
Date Found: September 16, 2008
Date Produced:
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NIH |
November 19, 2008
(CIT): The Mitochondria Interest Group (MIG) is an Inter-Institute Interest Group at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), with members from NIH and from around the world! MIG is concerned with all aspects of the mitochondrion and diseases in which the mitochondrion is involved. For more ...
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NIH |
November 19, 2008
(CIT): Transcriptional interactions in the cell are modulated by a variety of mechanisms that prevent their representation as pairwise interactions between a transcription factor and its targets. These include, among others, transcription factor modification by phosphorylation and acetylation, ...
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NIH |
November 19, 2008
(CIT): Dr. Greene received her PhD from the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston, where her research focused on determinants of alphavirus virulence, using Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus as a model system. She is presently a postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Diane Griffins lab at Johns ...
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NIH |
November 19, 2008
(CIT): The SBIG is a clearinghouse for discussions and interactions between scientists interested in all aspects of molecular structure, from experimental determination by x-ray crystallography, electron microscopy, mass spectrometry, and NMR, to theoretical and computational biology and ...
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NIH |
September 17, 2008
(CIT): NIH Clinical Center Ethics Grand Rounds A researcher from the US working in an international setting discovered genetic information that could have a significant impact on reproductive decision-making. When exploring how to handle this information he was told by local researchers, "We ...
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