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Retroviral integrations contribute to elevated host cancer rates during germline invasion
Gayle K. McEwen
, David E. Alquezar-Planas
, Anisha Dayaram
, Amber Gillett
, Rachael Tarlinton
, Nigel Mongan
, Keith J. Chappell
, Joerg Henning
,
Milton Tan
, Peter Timms
, Paul R. Young
,
Alfred L. Roca
, Alex D. Greenwood
Illinois Natural History Survey
Animal Sciences
School of Information Sciences
Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology
Research output
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peer-review
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Keyphrases
Germ Cells
100%
Cancer Incidence
100%
Integration Site
100%
Viral Integration
100%
Vertebrates
50%
Koala Retrovirus (KoRV)
50%
Koala
50%
Endogenization
50%
Healthy Tissue
25%
Tumor
25%
Oncogene
25%
Mammalian Genome
25%
Tumor Tissue
25%
Dysregulation
25%
Host Health
25%
Cancer Association
25%
Endogenous Retrovirus
25%
Phascolarctos Cinereus
25%
Cancer Genes
25%
Retroviral Infection
25%
Mutational Load
25%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Germline
100%
Germ Cell
100%
Oncogene
66%
Retrovirus
66%
Endogenous Retrovirus
33%
Mutational Load
33%
Immunology and Microbiology
Germ Cell
100%
Retrovirus
66%
Oncogene
66%
Lineages
33%
Endogenous Retrovirus
33%
Mutational Load
33%