Authors
Sonja N Brun, Shirley L Markant, Lourdes A Esparza, Guillermina Garcia, David Terry, Jen-Ming Huang, Marat S Pavlyukov, Xiao-Nan Li, Gerald A Grant, John R Crawford, Michael L Levy, Edward M Conway, Layton H Smith, Ichiro Nakano, Alan Berezov, Mark I Greene, Qiang Wang, Robert J Wechsler-Reya
Publication date
2015/7
Journal
Oncogene
Volume
34
Issue
29
Pages
3770
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Medulloblastoma (MB) is a highly malignant brain tumor that occurs primarily in children. Although surgery, radiation and high-dose chemotherapy have led to increased survival, many MB patients still die from their disease, and patients who survive suffer severe long-term side effects as a consequence of treatment. Thus, more effective and less toxic therapies for MB are critically important. Development of such therapies depends in part on identification of genes that are necessary for growth and survival of tumor cells. Survivin is an inhibitor of apoptosis protein that regulates cell cycle progression and resistance to apoptosis, is frequently expressed in human MB and when expressed at high levels predicts poor clinical outcome. Therefore, we hypothesized that Survivin may have a critical role in growth and survival of MB cells and that targeting it may enhance MB therapy. Here we show that Survivin is …
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