Keywords: nih nci xenograft prostate cancer national institutes of health nationalinstitutesofhealth national cancer institute nationalcancerinstitute prostate cells prostatecells prostate cancer prostatecancer organoid nih image gallery nihimagegallery Wild type human prostate cells from an organoid (a man-made construct that resembles an organ). These cells have come from a xenograft where they serve as controls for the study of primary prostate cancer tumor cells, which are also injected into mice and then extracted for characterization. Credit: National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health Wild type human prostate cells from an organoid (a man-made construct that resembles an organ). These cells have come from a xenograft where they serve as controls for the study of primary prostate cancer tumor cells, which are also injected into mice and then extracted for characterization. Credit: National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health Wild type human prostate cells from an organoid (a man-made construct that resembles an organ). These cells have come from a xenograft where they serve as controls for the study of primary prostate cancer tumor cells, which are also injected into mice and then extracted for characterization.
Credit: National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health cancer nih prostate nci nationalinstitutesofhealth prostatecancer xenograft nationalcancerinstitute organoid prostatecells |