Electrical and synaptic integration of glioma into neural circuits

High-grade gliomas are lethal brain cancers whose progression is robustly regulated by neuronal activity. Activity-regulated release of growth factors promotes glioma growth, but this alone is insufficient to explain the effect that neuronal activity exerts on glioma progression. Here we show that n...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Venkatesh, Humsa S. (Author), Morishita, Wade (Author), Geraghty, Anna C. (Author), Silverbush, Dana (Author), Gillespie, Shawn M. (Author), Arzt, Marlene (Author), Tam, Lydia T. (Author), Espenel, Cedric (Author), Ponnuswami, Anitha (Author), Ni, Lijun (Author), Woo, Pamelyn J. (Author), Taylor, Kathryn R. (Author), Agarwal, Amit (Author), Regev, Aviv (Author), Brang, David (Author), Vogel, Hannes (Author), Hervey-Jumper, Shawn (Author), Bergles, Dwight E. (Author), Suvà, Mario L. (Author), Malenka, Robert C. (Author), Monje, Michelle (Author)
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology (Contributor), Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT (Contributor)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020-08-24T14:15:59Z.
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