Phase transition inside the nucleus provides oncogenic function to mutant p53 in cancer

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Phase transition inside the nucleus provides oncogenic function to mutant p53 in cancer

Cancer has been recently shown to be affected by protein clusters, particularly by the aggregation of mutant variants of the tumor suppressor protein p53, which are present in more than half of malignant tumors. However, how the aggregates are formed is not yet fully understood. The understanding of this process is expected to provide new therapeutic tools able to prevent proteins to clump and cancer progression.

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