Selected Publication:
Smolle, J.
Biological basis of metastasis formation
Hautarzt. 1992; 43(2):55-64
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- Leading authors Med Uni Graz
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Smolle Josef
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- Abstract:
- Disseminated metastases are the most common cause of death in patients suffering from malignant disease. Tumor cell invasion and metastatic spread have often been considered to indicate an "undifferentiated" state of the tumor cells. In recent years, however, numerous studies point out, that invasiveness and the metastatic cascade are complex, highly differentiated processes based on manyfold interactions of the tumor cells and the surrounding stroma tissue. Changes of the cytoskeleton, adhesion molecules, motility, matrix-degrading enzyme activities, intercellular communication and intracellular signal transduction are considered to regulate the metastatic process. Thus basic research provides insight in pathogenetic mechanisms, which might represent targets for antimetastatic therapy in the future. This would be particularly mandatory in the case of malignant melanoma of the skin, where conventional cytotoxic chemotherapy has been rather disappointing.
- Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
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Angiogenesis Inducing Agents - physiology
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Animals - physiology
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Cell Adhesion Molecules - physiology
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Cell Movement - physiology
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Cell Transformation, Neoplastic - pathology
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Extracellular Matrix - physiology
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Humans - physiology
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Lymphocytes - physiology
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Mice - physiology
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Neoplasm Invasiveness - physiopathology
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Neoplasm Metastasis - physiopathology
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Organ Specificity - physiology
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Signal Transduction - physiology
- Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
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Malignant Melanoma
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Invasion
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Metastasis
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Tumor-Stroma-Interaction