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    Chapter

    Mechanism of Metastasis to Bone: The Role of Bone Marrow Endothelium

    Cancer cells in the bone come from two sources: primary tumors or metastases from other tissues. Primary cancer of the bone is rare, with 2,370 new cases and 1,330 deaths expected in 2007. Primary cancer accou...

    Carlton R. Cooper, Robert A. Satcher, Lisa A. Gurski in Bone and Cancer (2009)

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    Article

    Rho GTPases in PC-3 prostate cancer cell morphology, invasion and tumor cell diapedesis

    Background The Rho GTPases comprise one of the eight subfamilies of the Ras superfamily of monomeric GTP-binding proteins and are involved in cytoskeletal organization. Previously, using ...

    Linda Sequeira, Cara W. Dubyk, Tracy A. Riesenberger in Clinical & Experimental Metastasis (2008)

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    Article

    Step** out of the flow: capillary extravasation in cancer metastasis

    In order for cancer cells to successfully colonize a metastatic site, they must detach from the primary tumor using extracellular matrix-degrading proteases, intravasate and survive in the circulation, evade t...

    Fayth L. Miles, Freddie L. Pruitt in Clinical & Experimental Metastasis (2008)

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    Chapter

    Cancer Cells Homing to Bone: The Significance of Chemotaxis and Cell Adhesion

    Cancer cell metastasis is a complex process involving several well-characterized steps. To metastasize successfully, tumor cells must first detach from a primary mass, enter the blood circulation or lymphatics...

    Carlton R. Cooper, Robert A. Sikes in The Biology of Skeletal Metastases (2004)

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    Chapter

    Prostate carcinoma skeletal metastases: Cross-talk between tumor and bone

    The majority of men with progressive prostate cancer develop metastases with the skeleton being the most prevalent metastatic site. Unlike many other tumors that metastasize to bone and form osteolytic lesions...

    Evan T. Keller, Jian Zhang in Prostate Cancer: New Horizons in Research … (2002)

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    Article

    The regulation of prostate cancer cell adhesion to human bone marrow endothelial cell monolayers by androgen dihydrotestosterone and cytokines

    A previous study from our laboratory suggested that prostate cancer metastasis to bone may be mediated, in part, by preferential adhesion to human bone marrow endothelial (HBME) cells. Tumor cell adhesion to e...

    Carlton R. Cooper, Jasmine K. Bhatia in Clinical & Experimental Metastasis (2002)

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    Article

    Prostate Carcinoma Skeletal Metastases: Cross-talk between Tumor and Bone

    The majority of men with progressive prostate cancer develop metastases with the skeleton being the most prevalent metastatic site. Unlike many other tumors that metastasize to bone and form osteolytic lesions...

    Evan T. Keller, Jian Zhang, Carlton R. Cooper in Cancer and Metastasis Reviews (2001)