Tumour cell science
Cancer cells are cells gone wrong in other words, they no longer respond to many of the signals that control cellular growth and death. Cancer cells originate within tissues and, as they grow and divide, they diverge ever further from normalcy. Over time, these cells become increasingly resistant to the controls that maintain normal tissue and as a result, they divide more rapidly than their progenitors and become less dependent on signals from other cells. Cancer cells even evade programmed cell death, despite the fact that their multiple abnormalities would normally make them prime targets for apoptosis. In the late stages of cancer, cells break through normal tissue boundaries and metastasize to new sites in the body
- Therapeutic Target For Cancer
- Hormone Therapies
- Histology
- Pathology
- Cancer Stem Cells And Drug Resistance
Related Conference of Tumour cell science
21th World Congress on Tissue Engineering Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research
16th International Conference on Human Genetics and Genetic Diseases
19th International Conference on Genomics & Pharmacogenomics
Tumour cell science Conference Speakers
Recommended Sessions
- Applications in Nanotechnology
- Cell and Gene Therapy
- Cell And Organ Regeneration
- Cell Signaling & Cell Communication
- Cellular Plasticity And Reprogramming
- Clinical Trials on Cell & Gene Therapy
- Disease Modelling and Drug Discovery
- Diseases and Stem Cell Treatment
- Novel Technologies
- Re-Evaluating Strategies for Transplantation of stem cells
- Regulatory and Reimbursement Issues
- Stem Cell Apoptosis and Signal Transduction
- Stem Cell Biomarkers
- Stem Cell Embryology
- Stem Cell Epigenetics
- Stem Cell Market World Wide
- Stem Cell Niches & Bio banking
- Stem Cell Therapies
- Stem Cells & Types
- Stem Cells and Veterinary Applications
- Stem Cells technology
- Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
- Tumour cell science
Related Journals
Are you interested in
- Artificial Intelligence and Computational Biology in Regenerative Medicine - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Biomaterials and Nanotechnology in Regenerative Medicine - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Cancer Stem Cells and Oncology - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Cardiovascular Regeneration - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Clinical Trials and Translational Stem Cell Research - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications in Stem Cell Research - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Future Trends: Organoids, Bioengineering, and Next-Generation Therapies - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Gene Editing and CRISPR Technologies - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells (iPSCs) and Reprogramming - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Mesenchymal Stem Cells (MSCs) in Therapy - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Regenerative Dentistry and Craniofacial Applications - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Regenerative Medicine and Tissue Engineering - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Stem Cell Banking and Cryopreservation - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Stem Cell Biology and Cellular Mechanisms - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)
- Stem Cells in Neurological and Neurodegenerative Disorders - Stemgen 2026 (Japan)

