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Fr. 135.60
Robert Stern, Robert Stern, Robert (Emeritus Stern
Hyaluronan in Cancer Biology
English · Hardback
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Description
Klappentext Hyaluronan biology is being recognized as an important regulator of cancer progression. Paradoxically, both hyaluronan (HA) and hyaluronidases, the enzymes that eliminate HA, have also been correlated with cancer progression. Hyaluronan, a long-chain polymer of the extracellular matrix, opens up tissue spaces through which cancer cells move and metastasize. It also confers motility upon cells through interactions of cell-surface HA with the cytoskeleton. Embryonic cells in the process of movement and proliferation use the same strategy. It is an example of how cancer cells have commandeered normal cellular processes for their own survival and spread. There are also parallels between cancer and wound healing, cancer occasionally being defined as a wound that does not heal. The growing body of literature regarding this topic has recently progressed from describing the association of hyaluronan and hyaluronidase expression associated with different cancers, to understanding the mechanisms that drive tumor cell activation, proliferation, drug resistance, etc. No one source, however, discusses hyaluronan synthesis and catabolism, as well as the factors that regulate the balance. This book will offer a comprehensive summary and cutting-edge insight into Hyaluronan biology, the role of the HA receptors, the hyaluronidase enzymes that degrade HA, as well as HA synthesis enzymes and their relationship to cancer. Zusammenfassung Hyaluronan (HA) biology is recognized as an important regulator of cancer progression. This book offers a comprehensive summary and insight into Hyaluronan biology! the role of the HA receptors! the hyaluronidase enzymes that degrade HA! as well as HA synthesis enzymes and their relationship to cancer. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface: Hyaluronan and Cancer Robert Stern Section I: Historical Overview 1.Association between "acid mucopolysaccharides? and malignancy: an old concept comes of age, finally Robert Stern Section II: Cell Biology of Hyaluronan in Cancer 2.Hyaluronan: a constitutive regulator of chemoresistance and malignancy in cancer cells Mark G. Slomiany and Bryan P. Toole 3.Growth factor regulation of hyaluronan deposition in malignancies Paraskevi Heldin, Eugenia Karousou, and Spyros S. Skandalis 4.HYALURONAN BINDING PROTEIN 1 (HABP1) IN CANCER BIOLOGY Kasturi Datta Section III: Hyaluronan Receptors and Signal Transduction Pathways 5.CD44 meets merlin and ezrin: Their interplay mediates the pro-tumor activity of CD44 and tumor-suppressing effect of merlin Ivan Stamenkovic and Qin Yu 6.Hyaluronan-mediated CD44 interaction with receptor and non-receptor kinases promotes oncogenic signaling, cytoskeleton activation and tumor progression Lilly Y.W. Bourguignon 7.Adhesion and penetration: two sides of CD44 signal transduction cascades in the context of cancer cell metastasis David J.J. Waugh, Ashleigh McClatchey, Nicola Montgomery, and Suzanne McFarlane 8.INVOLVEMENT OF CD44, A MOLECULE WITH A THOUSAND FACES, IN CANCER DISSEMINATION David Naor, Shulamit B. Wallach-Dayan, Muayad A. Zahalka, and Ronit Vogt Sionov 9.Rhamm/Hmmr: an intinerant and multifunctional hyaluronan binding protein that modifies CD44 signaling and mitotic spindle formation. James B. McCarthy and Eva A. Turley Section IV: Hyaluronan Synthesis 10.Altered hyaluronan biosynthesis in cancer progression Naoki Itano and Koji Kimata Section V: Hyaluronan Degradation, the Hyaluronidases, and the Products of Degradation 11.HYALURONDIASE: BOTH A TUMOR PROMOTER AND SUPPRESSOR Vinata B. Lokeshwar and Marie G. Selzer 12.The hyaluronidases in cancer biology Robert Stern 13.Hyaluronan fragments: informational polymers commandeered by cancers Kazuki N. Sugahara Se...
List of contents
Preface: Hyaluronan and Cancer
Robert Stern
Section I: Historical Overview
1.Association between "acid mucopolysaccharides” and malignancy: an old
concept comes of age, finally
Robert Stern
Section II: Cell Biology of Hyaluronan in Cancer
2.Hyaluronan: a constitutive regulator of chemoresistance and malignancy in cancer cells
Mark G. Slomiany and Bryan P. Toole
3.Growth factor regulation of hyaluronan deposition in malignancies
Paraskevi Heldin, Eugenia Karousou, and Spyros S. Skandalis
4.HYALURONAN BINDING PROTEIN 1 (HABP1) IN CANCER BIOLOGY
Kasturi Datta
Section III: Hyaluronan Receptors and Signal Transduction Pathways
5.CD44 meets merlin and ezrin: Their interplay mediates the pro-tumor activity of CD44 and tumor-suppressing effect of merlin
Ivan Stamenkovic and Qin Yu
6.Hyaluronan-mediated CD44 interaction with receptor and non-receptor kinases promotes oncogenic signaling, cytoskeleton activation and tumor progression
Lilly Y.W. Bourguignon
7.Adhesion and penetration: two sides of CD44 signal transduction cascades in the context of cancer cell metastasis
David J.J. Waugh, Ashleigh McClatchey, Nicola Montgomery, and Suzanne McFarlane
8.INVOLVEMENT OF CD44, A MOLECULE WITH A THOUSAND FACES, IN CANCER DISSEMINATION
David Naor, Shulamit B. Wallach-Dayan, Muayad A. Zahalka, and Ronit Vogt Sionov
9.Rhamm/Hmmr: an intinerant and multifunctional hyaluronan binding protein that modifies CD44 signaling and mitotic spindle formation.
James B. McCarthy and Eva A. Turley
Section IV: Hyaluronan Synthesis
10.Altered hyaluronan biosynthesis in cancer progression
Naoki Itano and Koji Kimata
Section V: Hyaluronan Degradation, the Hyaluronidases, and the Products of Degradation
11.HYALURONDIASE: BOTH A TUMOR PROMOTER AND SUPPRESSOR
Vinata B. Lokeshwar and Marie G. Selzer
12.The hyaluronidases in cancer biology
Robert Stern
13.Hyaluronan fragments: informational polymers commandeered by cancers
Kazuki N. Sugahara
Section VI : Hyaluronan in Cancer Epithelial-Stromal Interactions
14.Hyaluronan in human tumors: importance of stromal and cancer cell-associated hyaluronan
Raija H. Tammi , Anne H. Kultti, Veli-Matti Kosma, Risto Pirinen, Päivi Auvinen, and Markku I. Tammi
15.THE ONCOFETAL PARADIGM REVISITED: MSF AND HA AS CONTEXTUAL DRIVERS OF CANCER PROGRESSION
Seth L. Schor, Ana M. Schor, Ian R. Ellis, Sarah J. Jones, Margaret Florence, Jacqueline Cox, and Anne-Marie Woolston
Section VII: Hyaluronan and Individual Cancers
16.Hyaluronan synthesis and turnover in prostate cancer
Melanie A. Simpson
17.Role of hyaluronan in melanoma progression
Carl Gebhardt, Marco Averbeck, Ulf Anderegg, and Jan C. Simon
18.Role of Hyaluronan metabolism in the initiation, invasion and metastasis of Breast cancer
Tracey J. Brown and Natalie Thomas
Section VIII: Clinical Uses of Hyaluronan-Related Biomaterials as Anti-Cancer Agents
19. Clinical application of hyaluronidase in combination cancer chemotherapy: a historic perspective
Gerhard Baumgartner and Gerhard Hamilton
20.Exploring the hyaluronan-CD44 interaction for cancer therapy
Virginia M. Platt and Francis C. Szoka
Section IX: A New Perspective
21.Hyaluronidase-2 and its role as a cell-entry receptor for sheep
retroviruses that cause contagious respiratory tract cancers
A. Dusty Miller
Report
"For decades, hyaluronan researchers have followed with growing interest the slowly developing story of how cancer progression and metastasis are correlated with or regulated by hyaluronan and its catabolic degradation products. Initially trying to understand the role of hyaluronan metabolism in prostate, breast, melanoma and other carcinomas was a bit like the story of the blind men touching and describing an elephant, each with a different impression of what they found. Now, however, our understanding of how hyaluronan is related to cancer biology has come into much clearer focus and this is captured nicely in Hyaluronan in Cancer - a collection of well written research perspectives and summaries from ~20 research groups around the world. The timing of this volume edited by Dr. Stern is excellent - readers can now get an overview and understand the importance of hyaluronan in multiple cancers. The book provides the first state-of-the-field summary and should be a highly useful and cited source for cancer biologists and hyaluronan researchers for many years." --Paul H. Weigel, Ph.D., Professor, Chairman George Lynn Cross Research Professor, Ed Miller Endowed Chair Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, College of Medicine, Oklahoma City, OK, USA
"Hyaluronan is a major component of the fluid extracellular matrix that surrounds cells and fills the intercellular spaces of tissue. Long known for its fundamental role in tissue development and physiology, hyaluronan's involvement in cancer progression and metastasis has more recently become the subject of intense multidisciplinary efforts. This volume provides a state-of-the-art review of hyaluronan's role in the cell biology of cancer, its diagnostic and prognostic value, and its potential as a target for therapeutic intervention. Authored by leading researchers in the field, the chapters help bridge the gap between basic science and clinical oncology, providing background and context that will prove valuable to both cancer and hyaluronan researchers for years to come." -- Philip A. Band, PhD, NYU Hospital for Joint Diseases, Department of Pharmacology, Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, New York University Medical Center, New York, NY, USA
"The link between the polysaccharide hyaluronan and cancer is well established. This excellent and comprehensive book brings together expert opinion for a thorough and up-to-date review of the topic. It covers the cell biology of hyaluronan in cancer, the role of hyaluronan receptors and signal transduction pathways and the clinical uses of hyaluronan-related biomaterials as anti-cancer agents. This book is a must read for those interested in the role of hyaluronan and its receptors in cancer biology and therapy." --Anthony J. Day, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Manchester, UK
Product details
Authors | Robert Stern |
Assisted by | Robert Stern (Editor), Robert (Emeritus Stern (Editor) |
Publisher | ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV |
Languages | English |
Product format | Hardback |
Released | 23.04.2009 |
EAN | 9780123741783 |
ISBN | 978-0-12-374178-3 |
No. of pages | 468 |
Subjects |
Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology
> Medicine
> Non-clinical medicine
Biochemie, SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Biochemistry, MEDICAL / Oncology, Medical / Nursing |
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