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The Oncogenomics Center, Institute for Cancer Research and Treatment (IRCC), University of Torino Medical School, Candiolo (To), Italy.
It is now widely accepted that cancer is a genetic disease and that alterations in the DNA sequence underlie the development of every neoplasm. The identification of mutated genes that are causally implicated in oncogenesis ('cancer genes') has been a major goal in medical sciences for the last two decades. The availability of the human genome sequence coupled to the introduction of high throughput sequencing technologies has created an unprecedented opportunity in this field. It is now possible to perform mutational studies of entire cancer genomes thus providing a complete description of mutations underlying human oncogenesis. The recent identification of high frequency mutations in the BRAF and PI3K genes suggests that many more cancer genes remain to be discovered. In this review, we consider how the systematic mutational analysis of gene families in individual neoplasms has led to the identification of a number of cancer genes and how this information is influencing the treatment of cancer.
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