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In this World View, H. Michael Shepard describes his personal story behind the discovery of trastuzumab, 25 years since its FDA approval for HER2-overexpressing breast cancers.
Recently published in Nature, Fan et al. demonstrate that accumulation of advanced glycation end-products in the extracellular matrix of the liver increases viscoelasticity to promote hepatocellular carcinoma growth, independent of stiffness.
Two independent studies published in Nature implicate distal cholesterol biosynthesis in the regulation of ferroptosis and show that 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC) is an endogenous, anti-ferroptotic metabolite.
In this Tools of the Trade, Juliann Shih describes the development of BISCUT, which detects genomic loci that are subject to fitness advantages or disadvantages by interrogating the length distributions of partial somatic copy-number alterations to enable the discovery of new drivers of aneuploidy in cancer.
Mutant gain-of-function p53 is commonly found in human cancers. Huang, Cao, Qian et al. developed and validated the use of multifunctional biomimetic nanoreceptors that bind to and promote the degradation of mutant p53 as a cancer therapy.
In this Tools of the Trade article, Vakul Mohanty describes the development and use of METAFlux, a computational framework that infers metabolic flux from bulk and single-cell RNA-sequencing data.
Goddard et al. report that disseminated tumour cells evade T cell immunity due to their relative scarcity, which decreases the likelihood of T cell–tumour cell interactions.
Zhao et al. identified lymphatic endothelial-like cells in glioblastoma and demonstrated their role in promoting tumour growth through increased glioblastoma cholesterol metabolism.
In this Journal Club, Góss dos Santos discusses a study that successfully generated sarcoma-derived organoids and utilized them to identify a novel therapeutic target.
In a recent Developmental Cell paper, Falvo et al. establish a role for epigenetic memory of inflammatory injury in promoting pancreatic tumorigenesis.
In a comprehensive study in acute myeloid leukaemia, Ozga et al. demonstrate sex-specific differences in the frequency and prognostic effect of genetic alterations.
Epidemiologic cohorts of cancer have contributed to the current understanding of cancer risk factors. In this Comment, Gomez and Cheng advocate for a new generation of cohorts that include underserved and understudied populations, and also address the roles of structural and social determinants of health.
The concurrence of cancer and pregnancy can pose complex medical, psychosocial and ethical issues. In this Comment, Varella and Partridge present approaches to the treatment of cancer during pregnancy, with a focus on patient preferences, patient and fetal risks, and team-based management.
Kreuzaler et al. examine the spatial metabolic rewiring driven by oncogenic MYC and show that it leads to increased import of vitamin B5, which represents a metabolic vulnerability to tumour progression.
In this study, Bansaccal et al. analyse why, at some skin locations, oncogene-expressing cells rarely progress to cancer and found that a dense dermal collagen network prevents skin cancer formation.
In this Comment, Berna Özdemir summarizes the evidence for greater drug toxicity in female patients and emphasizes the need for increased awareness of sex differences at all stages of drug development to establish sex-specific anticancer treatment strategies.
In this Tools of the Trade article, Xiwen Tang describes the development of in vivo reporters detecting mutant p53 at the protein level, which enables the visualization of precancerous cells during cancer initiation.