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RECORD NUMBER: 161 OF 350

Main Title Insertional Mutagenesis Strategies in Cancer Genetics [electronic resource] /
Type EBOOK
Author Dupuy, Adam J.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Largaespada, David A.
Publisher Springer New York,
Year Published 2011
Call Number RC261-271
ISBN 9781441976567
Subjects Medicine ; Oncology ; Human genetics ; Toxicology
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-7656-7
Collation VIII, 200 p. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
Chapter 1: Introduction: Author: Anton Berns (Netherlands Cancer Institute) -- Chapter 2: Retroviral mutagenesis in mouse leukemia/lymphoma: Author: David Largaespada, Ph.D. (University of Minnesota) -- Chapter 3: MMTV models of breast cancer: Author: John Hilkens (NKI) -- Chapter 4: Retroviral mutagenesis in other organisms: Author: Michael Dvorak (Inst. Of Molecular Genetics, Prague, Czech Rep.) -- Chapter 5: Sleeping Beauty models of cancer: Author: Adam J. Dupuy, Ph.D. (University of Iowa) -- Chapter 6: Insertional mutagenesis in gene therapy patients: Author: David Williams, M.D. (Cincinnati Children's Hospital) -- Chapter 7: Bioinformatics of high throughput insertional mutagenesis: Author: Keiko Akagi (NCI-Frederick). Over the past decades, insertional mutagenesis has played an important contribution to our understanding of cancer. Initially, the action of slow transforming retroviruses was used to identify endogenous cellular oncogenes (e.g. Myc, Myb). These observations sparked a series of experiments that eventually led to the idea cancer is caused by somatically acquired mutations in endogenous oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes. Since these discoveries, insertional mutagenesis has been used to identify novel cancer genes in a variety of tumor types in animal models of cancer. More recent work has developed novel insertional mutagens, such as transposons, that have broader capabilities to model cancer in vivo. While this work has focused on developing animal models of cancer, recent gene therapy trials in human patients have shown that insertional mutagenesis can also contribute to transformation. The goal of this work is summarize the contribution that insertional mutagenesis has made to our understanding of cancer. A variety of insertional mutagens are presented that have been used to study a variety of tumor types in several model organisms. In addition, the impact of insertional mutagenesis in several gene therapy trials is discussed along with strategies to avoid such complications in future clinical trials.