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This is the second edition of a widely used textbook that consolidates the basic concepts of the cancer gene theory and provides a framework for understanding the genetic basis of cancer.… Meer...

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Fred Bunz:

Principles of Cancer Genetics - nieuw boek

2016, ISBN: 9789401774840

eBooks, eBook Download (PDF), This is the second edition of a widely used textbook that consolidates the basic concepts of the cancer gene theory and provides a framework for understandin… Meer...

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Principles of Cancer Genetics - nieuw boek

ISBN: 9789401774840

; PDF \ Syouji Nakamura; Scientific, Technical and Medical > Pre-clinical medicine: basic sciences > Medical genetics, World Scientific Publishing Company

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Principles of Cancer Genetics - Fred Bunz
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Fred Bunz:
Principles of Cancer Genetics - nieuw boek

2016, ISBN: 9789401774840

eBooks, eBook Download (PDF), [PU: Springer Netherlands], Springer Netherlands, 2016

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Principles of Cancer Genetics - Fred Bunz
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Fred Bunz:
Principles of Cancer Genetics - nieuw boek

2016, ISBN: 9789401774840

eBook Download (PDF), eBooks, [PU: Springer Netherlands]

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Gedetalleerde informatie over het boek. - Principles of Cancer Genetics


EAN (ISBN-13): 9789401774840
Verschijningsjaar: 2016
Uitgever: Springer Netherlands

Boek bevindt zich in het datenbestand sinds 2016-08-04T10:13:14+02:00 (Amsterdam)
Detailpagina laatst gewijzigd op 2021-03-14T16:00:02+01:00 (Amsterdam)
ISBN/EAN: 9789401774840

ISBN - alternatieve schrijfwijzen:
978-94-017-7484-0
alternatieve schrijfwijzen en verwante zoekwoorden:
Auteur van het boek: bunz, bünz


Gegevens van de uitgever

Auteur: Fred Bunz
Titel: Principles of Cancer Genetics
Uitgeverij: Springer; Springer Netherland
343 Bladzijden
Verschijningsjaar: 2016-03-01
Dordrecht; NL
Gedrukt / Gemaakt in
Taal: Engels
90,94 € (DE)
93,50 € (AT)
100,50 CHF (CH)
Available
XII, 343 p. 138 illus., 29 illus. in color.

EA; E107; eBook; Nonbooks, PBS / Medizin/Nichtklinische Fächer; Onkologie; Verstehen; Cancer; Oncogenes; Tumor suppressor genes; Genetic Instability; Genetics; B; Cancer Research; Human Genetics; Oncology; Cancer Biology; Medical Genetics; Oncology; Biomedical and Life Sciences; Genetik, Medizin; BB

  Preface Chapter 1: The Genetic Basis of CancerThe cancer gene theoryCancers are invasive tumorsCancer is a unique type of genetic diseaseWhat are cancer genes and how are they acquired?Mutations alter the human genomeGenes and mutationsSingle nucleotide substitutionsGene silencing is marked by cytosine methylation: epigeneticsEnvironmental mutagens, mutations and cancerInflammation promotes the propagation of cancer genesStem cells, Darwinian selection and the clonal evolution of cancersSelective pressure and adaptation:  hypoxia and altered metabolismMultiple somatic mutations punctuate clonal evolutionTumor growth leads to cellular heterogeneityTumors are distinguished by their spectrum of driver gene mutations and passenger gene mutationsColorectal cancer: a model for understanding the process of tumorigenesisDo cancer cells divide more rapidly than normal cells?Germline cancer genes allow neoplasia to bypass steps in clonal evolutionCancer syndromes reveal rate-limiting steps in tumorigenesisThe etiologic triad: heredity, the environment, and stem cell divisionUnderstanding cancer genetics Chapter 2:  OncogenesWhat is an oncogene?The discovery of transmissible cancer genesViral oncogenes are derived from the host genomeThe search for activated oncogenes:  the RAS gene familyComplex genomic rearrangements: the MYC gene familyProto-oncogene activation by gene amplificationProto-oncogenes can be activated by chromosomal translocation Chromosomal translocations in liquid tumorsChronic myeloid leukemia and the Philadelphia chromosomeOncogenic activation of transcription factors in Prostate cancer and Ewing’s sarcoma Oncogene discovery in the genomic era: mutations in PIK3CA Selection of tumor-associated mutationsMultiple modes of proto-oncogene activationOncogenes are dominant cancer genesGermline mutations in RET and MET confer cancer predispositionProto-oncogene activation and tumorigenesis Chapter 3:  Tumor Suppressor GenesWhat is a tumor suppressor gene?The discovery of recessive cancer phenotypesRetinoblastoma and Knudson’s two-hit hypothesisChromosomal localization of the retinoblastoma geneThe mapping and cloning of the retinoblastoma gene Tumor suppressor gene inactivation: the second ‘hit’ and loss of heterozygosityRecessive genes, dominant traitsAPC inactivation in inherited and sporadic colorectal cancersTP53 inactivation: a frequent event in tumorigenesis Functional inactivation of p53: tumor suppressor genes and oncogenes interactMutant TP53 in the germline:  Li Fraumeni syndromeGains-of-function caused by cancer-associated mutations in TP53Cancer predisposition: allelic penetrance, relative risk and the odds ratioBreast cancer susceptibility:  BRCA1 and BRCA2Genetic losses on chromosome 9:  CDKN2AComplexity at CDKN2A:  neighboring and overlapping genesGenetic losses on chromosome 10:  PTENSMAD4 and the maintenance of stromal architectureTwo distinct genes cause neurofibromatosisFrom flies to humans, Patched proteins regulate developmental morphogenesisvon Hippel-Lindau diseaseNOTCH1: tumor suppressor gene or oncogene?Multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1Most tumor suppressor genes are tissue-specific Modeling cancer syndromes in miceGenetic variation and germline cancer genesTumor suppressor gene inactivation during colorectal tumorigenesisInherited tumor suppressor gene mutations: gatekeepers and landscapersMaintaining the genome: caretakers  Chapter 4:  Genetic Instability and CancerWhat is genetic instability?The majority of cancer cells are aneuploidAneuploid cancer cells exhibit chromosome instabilityChromosome instability arises early in colorectal tumorigenesisChromosomal instability accelerates clonal evolutionAneuploidy can result from mutations that directly impact mitosisSTAG2 and the cohesion of sister chromatidsOther genetic and epigenetic causes of aneuploidyTransition from tetraploidy to aneuploidy during tumorigenesis  Multiple forms of genetic instability in cancerDefects in mismatch repair cause hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancerMismatch repair-deficient cancers have a distinct spectrum of mutationsDefects in nucleotide excision repair cause xeroderma pigmentosumNER syndromes: clinical heterogeneity and pleiotropyDNA repair defects and mutagens define two steps towards genetic instabilityDefects in DNA crosslink repair cause Fanconi anemiaA defect in DNA double strand break responses causes ataxia-telangiectasiaA unique form of genetic instability underlies Bloom syndrome Aging and cancer:  insights from the progeroid syndromesInstability at the end: telomeres and telomeraseOverview: genes and genetic stability Chapter 5:  Cancer GenomesDiscovering the genetic basis of cancer: from genes to genomesWhat types of genetic alterations are found in tumor cells?How many genes are mutated in the various types of cancer?What is the significance of the mutations that are found in cancers?When do cancer-associated mutations occur?How many different cancer genes are there? How many cancer genes are required for the development of cancer?Cancer genetics shapes our understanding of metastasisTumors are genetically heterogenousBeyond the exome: the ‘dark matter’ of the cancer genomeA summary:  the genome of a cancer cell Chapter 6:  Cancer Gene PathwaysWhat are cancer gene pathways?Cellular pathways are defined by protein-protein interactionsIndividual biochemical reactions, multistep pathways, and networksProtein phosphorylation is a common regulatory mechanism Signals from the cell surface:  protein tyrosine kinases Membrane-associated GTPases:  the RAS pathwayAn intracellular kinase cascade: the MAPK pathwayGenetic alterations of the RAS pathway in cancer Membrane-associated lipid phosphorylation: the PI3K/AKT pathwayControl of cell growth and energetics:  the mTOR pathway Genetic alterations in the PI3K/AKT and mTOR pathways define roles in cell survivalThe STAT pathway transmits cytokine signals to the cell nucleusMorphogenesis and cancer:  the WNT/APC pathwayDysregulation of the WNT/APC pathway in cancersNotch signaling mediates cell-to-cell communicationMorphogenesis and cancer:  the Hedgehog pathwayTGF-/ SMAD signaling maintains adult tissue homeostasisMYC is a downstream effector of multiple cancer gene pathways activation is triggered by damaged or incompletely replicated chromosomes p53 is controlled by protein kinases encoded by tumor suppressor genesp53 induces the transcription of genes that suppress cancer phenotypesFeedback loops dynamically control p53 abundance The DNA damage signaling network activates interconnected repair pathwaysInactivation of the pathways to apoptosis in cancerRB1 and the regulation of the cell cycleSeveral cancer gene pathways converge on cell cycle regulatorsMany cancer cells are cell cycle checkpoint-deficientChromatin modification is recurrently altered in many types of cancerSummary: putting together the puzzle   Chapter 7:  Genetic Alternations in Common CancersCancer genes cause diverse diseasesCancer incidence and prevalenceLung cancerProstate cancerBreast cancerColorectal cancerEndometrial cancerMelanoma of the skinBladder cancerLymphomaCancers in the kidneyThyroid cancerLeukemiaCancer in the pancreasOvarian cancerCancers of the oral cavity and pharynxLiver cancerCancer of the uterine cervixStomach cancerBrain tumors Chapter 8: Cancer Genetics in the ClinicThe uses of genetic informationElements of cancer risk:  carcinogens and genes Identifying carriers of germline cancer genesCancer genes as biomarkers of early stage malignancies Cancer genes as biomarkers for diagnosis, prognosis and recurrenceConventional anticancer therapies inhibit cell growthExploiting the loss of DNA repair pathways: synthetic lethalityOn the horizon: achieving synthetic lethality in TP53-mutant cancersMolecularly targeted therapy:  BCR-ABL and imatinibClonal evolution of therapeutic resistanceTargeting EGFR mutationsAntibody-mediated inhibition of receptor tyrosine kinasesInhibiting Hedgehog signalingA pipeline from genetically-defined targets to targeted therapies Neoantigens are recognized by the immune systemThe future of oncology Index  

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