Amplified DNA with limited homology to myc cellular oncogene is shared by human neuroblastoma cell lines and a neuroblastoma tumour
Manfred Schwab(University of California, San Francisco), Kari Alitalo(University of California, San Francisco), Karl-Heinz Klempnauer(University of California, San Francisco), Harold Varmus(University of California, San Francisco), J. Michael Bishop(University of California, San Francisco), Fred Gilbert(Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai), Garrett M. Brodeur(Washington University in St. Louis), Milton N. Goldstein(Washington University in St. Louis), Jeffrey M. Trent(University of Arizona)
Cited by 1,422
Abstract
Related Papers
Homogeneously staining chromosomal regions contain amplified copies of an abundantly expressed cellular oncogene (c-myc) in malignant neuroendocrine cells from a human colon carcinoma.
Kari Alitalo, M. Schwab, Ching‐Shwun Lin et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1983|767
Three human transforming genes are related to the viral ras oncogenes.
Kohei Shimizu, Mitchell Goldfarb, Y. Suard et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|1983|387