Fr. 261.00

Cancer Cell Lines Part 2 - Cancer Cell Lines Part 2

English · Hardback

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Description

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Continuous cell lines derived from human cancers are the mostwidely used resource in laboratory-based cancer research. The first 3 volumes of this series on Human Cell Culture are devoted to these cancer cell lines. The chapters in these first 3 volumes have a common aim. Their purpose is to address 3 questions offundamental importance to the relevanceof human cancer cell lines as model systems of each type of cancer: 1. Do the cell lines available accurately represent the clinical presentation? 2. Do the cell lines accurately represent the histopathology of the original tumors? 3. Do the cell lines accurately represent the molecular genetics of this type of cancer? The cancer cell lines available are derived, in most cases, from the more aggressive and advanced cancers. There are few cell lines derived from low grade organ-confined cancers. This gap can be filled with conditionally immortalized human cancer cell lines. We do not know why the success rate for establishing cell lines is so low for some types of cancer and so high for others. The histopathology of the tumor of origin and the extent to which the derived cell line retains the differentiated features of that tumor are critical. The concept that a single cell line derived from a tumor at a particular site is representative oftumors at that site is naïve and misleading.

List of contents

Ovarian Cancer.- Cervical Cancer.- Endometrial Cancer.- Breast Cancer.- Paired Breast Cancer Cell Lines.- Ovarian Germ Cell Tumors.- Testicular Germ Cell Tumors.- Choriocarcinoma.- Thymomas and Thymic Cancers.- Kaposi's Sarcoma.- Brain Tumors.- Head and Neck Cancers.- Gastric Cancer.- Colorectal Cancer.- Prostate Cancer.- Liver Cancer.- Wilms' Tumor and Other Childhood Renal Neoplasms.- Retinoblastoma.

Summary

Continuous cell lines derived from human cancers are the mostwidely used resource in laboratory-based cancer research. The first 3 volumes of this series on Human Cell Culture are devoted to these cancer cell lines. The chapters in these first 3 volumes have a common aim. Their purpose is to address 3 questions offundamental importance to the relevanceof human cancer cell lines as model systems of each type of cancer: 1. Do the cell lines available accurately represent the clinical presentation? 2. Do the cell lines accurately represent the histopathology of the original tumors? 3. Do the cell lines accurately represent the molecular genetics of this type of cancer? The cancer cell lines available are derived, in most cases, from the more aggressive and advanced cancers. There are few cell lines derived from low grade organ-confined cancers. This gap can be filled with conditionally immortalized human cancer cell lines. We do not know why the success rate for establishing cell lines is so low for some types of cancer and so high for others. The histopathology of the tumor of origin and the extent to which the derived cell line retains the differentiated features of that tumor are critical. The concept that a single cell line derived from a tumor at a particular site is representative oftumors at that site is naïve and misleading.

Product details

Assisted by J.R. Masters (Editor), Joh Masters (Editor), John Masters (Editor), John R. W. Masters (Editor), Ø Palsson (Editor), Ø Palsson (Editor), B. Palsson (Editor), Bernhard Ø Palsson (Editor)
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 26.06.2009
 
EAN 9780792358787
ISBN 978-0-7923-5878-7
No. of pages 377
Weight 730 g
Illustrations X, 377 p.
Series Human Cell Culture
Human Cell Culture
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > Clinical medicine

C, INTERNAL MEDICINE, Oncology, Biomedical and Life Sciences, Cancer Research, Cellular biology (cytology), Clinical & internal medicine, Cell Biology, Cancer Biology

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