Published in Blood Weekly, October 20th, 2005
"Recent studies have suggested that one of the polycomb group genes, BMI-1, has an important role in the maintenance of normal and leukemic stem cells by repressing the INK4a/ARFlocus.
"Here, we quantitatively examined BMI-1 expression level in samples from patients with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and other hematologic malignancies," scientists writing in the International Journal of Hematology report.
"Moderate to high BMI-1 expression was detected in AML patients, and the BMI-1 expression levels in AML samples were significantly higher than in normal bone...
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Source: Blood Weekly (2005-10-20)
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