The overall goal of Core B, Scientific Services, is to provide shared scientific services for the individual scientific projects. This core is essential to the overall success of the Program Project. It makes five important contributions: First, by combining resources, it provides an economy of scale. Second, by providing well maintained facilities, it saves time and makes each program member more efficient. Third, by supporting trained technical support staff, it provides technical expertise, which is of benefit to all program members, and especially when new members arrive. Fourth, by providing quality control of shared reagents, the success rate and reproducibility of experiments is higher and the results of members in different projects can more easily be directly compared. And, fifth, shared facilities facilitate the exchange of experimental ideas, methodology, and results, and limits the recurrence of experimental problems. Every project in this Program Project benefits from the Scientific Services Core. It provides: (1) Cell culture and virus production facilities. (2) Microscopy services and expertise. (3) Bioinformatics services and expertise. (4) Instrumentation support.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Program Projects (P01)
Project #
2P01CA013106-31
Application #
6575611
Study Section
Project Start
2002-03-21
Project End
2002-12-31
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
31
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$228,401
Indirect Cost
Name
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Department
Type
DUNS #
065968786
City
Cold Spring Harbor
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
11724
Banito, Ana; Li, Xiang; Laporte, Aimée N et al. (2018) The SS18-SSX Oncoprotein Hijacks KDM2B-PRC1.1 to Drive Synovial Sarcoma. Cancer Cell 34:346-348
Skucha, Anna; Ebner, Jessica; Schmöllerl, Johannes et al. (2018) MLL-fusion-driven leukemia requires SETD2 to safeguard genomic integrity. Nat Commun 9:1983
Banito, Ana; Li, Xiang; Laporte, Aimée N et al. (2018) The SS18-SSX Oncoprotein Hijacks KDM2B-PRC1.1 to Drive Synovial Sarcoma. Cancer Cell 33:527-541.e8
Lin, Kuan-Ting; Ma, Wai Kit; Scharner, Juergen et al. (2018) A human-specific switch of alternatively spliced AFMID isoforms contributes to TP53 mutations and tumor recurrence in hepatocellular carcinoma. Genome Res :
On, Kin Fan; Jaremko, Matt; Stillman, Bruce et al. (2018) A structural view of the initiators for chromosome replication. Curr Opin Struct Biol 53:131-139
Knott, Simon R V; Wagenblast, Elvin; Khan, Showkhin et al. (2018) Asparagine bioavailability governs metastasis in a model of breast cancer. Nature 554:378-381
Shamay, Yosi; Shah, Janki; I??k, Mehtap et al. (2018) Quantitative self-assembly prediction yields targeted nanomedicines. Nat Mater 17:361-368
Tramentozzi, Elisa; Ferraro, Paola; Hossain, Manzar et al. (2018) The dNTP triphosphohydrolase activity of SAMHD1 persists during S-phase when the enzyme is phosphorylated at T592. Cell Cycle 17:1102-1114
Arun, Gayatri; Diermeier, Sarah D; Spector, David L (2018) Therapeutic Targeting of Long Non-Coding RNAs in Cancer. Trends Mol Med 24:257-277
Tarumoto, Yusuke; Lu, Bin; Somerville, Tim D D et al. (2018) LKB1, Salt-Inducible Kinases, and MEF2C Are Linked Dependencies in Acute Myeloid Leukemia. Mol Cell 69:1017-1027.e6

Showing the most recent 10 out of 610 publications