“…K-ras mutation has been detected in 70-90% of pancreatic carcinomas, 50% of colorectal carcinomas, and 20-50% of lung carcinomas (Forrester et al, 1987;Rodenhuis et al, 1987;Bos, 1989;Hruban et al, 1993). In tumor cells carrying K-ras mutation, the presence of oncogenic K-Ras is necessary for maintenance of the transformed phenotype (Fisher et al, 2001;Johnson et al, 2001;Meuwissen et al, 2001). Given this, several techniques, such as techniques using farnesyl-transferase inhibitors, antisense oligonucleotides, ribozymes or siRNAs, have been developed to inhibit the activity of Ras (Adjei, 2001;Andreyev et al, 2001;Brummelkamp et al, 2002).…”