
Progress in Experimental Tumor Research / Animal Models of Cancer Predisposition Syndromes
Karger, S (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published in 1999
Book
Hardback
VIII, 176 pages
978-3-8055-6719-0 (ISBN)
Article exhausted; check different version
Description
Studies of both spontaneous and environmentally induced tumors have demonstrated that there is considerable variation among individuals in their response to carcinogenesis, suggesting that genetic factors influence the likelihood of developing cancer. The increasing availability of genetic markers has enabled researchers to analyze polygenic traits such as cancer predisposition. Animal models have proved to be useful experimental tools for identifying and characterizing such genetic factors. Such a comparative approach helps to identify factors that animals and man have in common and to elucidate the basic mechanism of determining susceptibility. This book brings together some of the most recent advances made in the genetic analysis of cancer susceptibility using animal models. Leading investigators in the field present model systems for studying cancers including liver and stomach cancer, breast cancer, myeloid leukemia, retrovirus-induced lymphoma, pulmonary adenoma and familial adenomatous polyposis. An overview of transgenic and gene knockout mice is given, and in several chapters the implications of these findings for human cancers are discussed. Providing an excellent survey of the field, the book is recommended reading for all scientists and graduate students in experimental cancer research and cancer genomics.
More details
Series
Language
German
Place of publication
Basel
Switzerland
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
29 figs., 3 in color, 21 tab.
Dimensions
Height: 24 cm
Width: 17 cm
Weight
511 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-8055-6719-0 (9783805567190)
Schweitzer Classification
Content
Multiple genes governing biological functions in the genetic backgrounds of laboratory mice and Asian wild mice; overview of transgenic gene knockout mice; alkylation carcinogenesis in mice with altered levels of DNA repair methyltransferase; cancer predisposition in mutant mice defective in the XPC DNA repair gene; myeloid leukemia - disease genes and mouse models; genetic and epigenetic susceptibility to endogenous retrovirus-induced lymphomas in SL mice; inheritance of pulmonary adenoma susceptibility in mice; TSC2 gene mutant (eker) rat model of a mendelian dominantly inherited cancer; gene knockout mice as a model for familial adenomatous polyposis; a rat model system for predisposition to stomach cancer; genetic and hormonal regulation of murine hepatocarcinogenesis; genetics of skin tumor promotion; the genetic components of susceptibility to breast cancer in the rat.