Figures and Tables
From the following article:
MYC inactivation uncovers pluripotent differentiation and tumour dormancy in hepatocellular cancer
Catherine M. Shachaf, Andrew M. Kopelman, Constadina Arvanitis, Åsa Karlsson, Shelly Beer, Stefanie Mandl, Michael H. Bachmann, Alexander D. Borowsky, Boris Ruebner, Robert D. Cardiff, Qiwei Yang, J. Michael Bishop, Christopher H. Contag and Dean W. Felsher
Nature 431, 1112-1117(28 October 2004)
doi:10.1038/nature03043
Figure 1
Conditional MYC overexpression in the liver induces hepatocellular cancer whereas MYC inactivation results in sustained tumour regression.
Full size figure and legend (74K)Figure 2
MYC inactivation in liver tumours results in rapid tumour regression associated with loss of expression of tumour markers, differentiation and apoptosis.
Full size figure and legend (74K)Figure 3
MYC inactivation in liver tumours results in the formation of normal hepatic structures.
Full size figure and legend (167K)Figure 4
Tumour dormancy observed in liver tumours after MYC inactivation.
Full size figure and legend (88K)



