S. A. Eccles, G. Box, W. Court, J. Sandle, C. J. Dean
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引用次数: 26
Abstract
It has been estimated that approx 60–70% of cancer patients harbor overt or subclinical metastases at diagnosis, and it is the eradication of such systemic disease that largely determines survival. Preclinical tumor model systems employed to evaluate potential new treatment strategies should aim to represent the process and patterns of metastasis of their clinical counterparts as closely as possible. Severe combined immune-deficient (SCID) andnu/nu mice have been extensively used as hosts for the growth of human tumor cell lines and in some cases fresh tumor material. However, in most instances the resulting neoplasms fail to metastasize, and the aberrant immune systems of such animals has limited their use mainly to passive therapies of localized disease. Recently, the development of specially selected tumor variants and the use of appropriate orthotopic sites for implantation has provided several models in which dissemination can be demonstrated. Where the gene coding for a potential target antigen has been cloned, and where its overexpression or mutation is associated with malignancy (e.g., c-erbB-2, H-ras), transgenic mice may yield tumors that will develop in these immunocompetent hosts. In some cases such tumors exhibit metastasis. A third approach is to transfect human genes of interest into appropriate rodent tumors expressing the desired metastatic phenotype. These various approaches are compared with particular reference to mammary carcinoma biology.
期刊介绍:
Cell Biochemistry and Biophysics (CBB) aims to publish papers on the nature of the biochemical and biophysical mechanisms underlying the structure, control and function of cellular systems
The reports should be within the framework of modern biochemistry and chemistry, biophysics and cell physiology, physics and engineering, molecular and structural biology. The relationship between molecular structure and function under investigation is emphasized.
Examples of subject areas that CBB publishes are:
· biochemical and biophysical aspects of cell structure and function;
· interactions of cells and their molecular/macromolecular constituents;
· innovative developments in genetic and biomolecular engineering;
· computer-based analysis of tissues, cells, cell networks, organelles, and molecular/macromolecular assemblies;
· photometric, spectroscopic, microscopic, mechanical, and electrical methodologies/techniques in analytical cytology, cytometry and innovative instrument design
For articles that focus on computational aspects, authors should be clear about which docking and molecular dynamics algorithms or software packages are being used as well as details on the system parameterization, simulations conditions etc. In addition, docking calculations (virtual screening, QSAR, etc.) should be validated either by experimental studies or one or more reliable theoretical cross-validation methods.