Diet and cancer : molecular mechanisms of interactions
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Bibliographic Information
Diet and cancer : molecular mechanisms of interactions
(Advances in experimental medicine and biology, v. 375)
Plenum Press, c1995
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"Proceedings of the American Institute for Cancer Research's Fifth Annual Conference on Diet and Cancer: Molecular Mechanisms of Interactions, held September 1-2, 1994, in Washington, D.C."--t.p. verso
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The fifth of the annual research conferences of the American Institute for Cancer Research was held September l-2, 1994, at the L'Enfant Plaza Hotel in Washington, DC. Appropriately, in view of current directions in research, the theme was "Diet and Cancer: Molecular Mechanisms of Interactions". This proceedings volume contains chapters from the platform presentations and abstracts from the poster session held on the end of the first day. The subtopics for the tl;rree sessions held were "Retinoids, Vitamins A and Din Cancer Prevention and Therapy," "Choline and Lipids: Signal Transduction, Gene Expression and Growth Regulation," and "Dietary Factors and Regulation of Oncogenes, Growth and Differentiation. " A general overview on vitamins A and D emphasized that A and D, in addition to their established roles in vision, reproduction, and bone mineral homeostasis, may play significant roles in regulating cell function. Vitamin A metabolites, trans-retinoic acid and 9-cis-retinoic acid, regulate growth and differentiation. Furthermore, vitamin A deprived animals were more susceptible to both spontaneous and carcinogen-induced tumors. Epidemiological studies showed a correlation between low A intake and higher incidences of certain types of human cancers. Conversely, all-trans retinoic acid is useful in treatment and control of certain types of cancer. Physiologically, Vitamin D is converted to the active form, l ,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (VD). VD regulates hormone production and secretion, myocardial contractility, vascu 3 3 3 lar tone, and growth inhibition and differentiation.
Table of Contents
1 Use of Vitamins A and D In Chemoprevention and Therapy of Cancer: Control of Nuclear Receptor Expression and Function-Vitamins, Cancer and Receptors.- 2 Vitamin A Chemoprevention of Lung Cancer: A Short-Term Biomarker Study.- 3 Human Cervical Cancer: Retinoids, Interferon and Human Papillomavirus.- 4 Role of Apoptosis in the Growth Inhibitory Effects of Vitamin D in MCF-7 Cells.- 5 Vitamin D and Prostate Cancer.- 6 Choline and Hepatocarcinogenesis in the Rat.- 7 Dietary Effects on Gene Expression in Mammary Tumorigenesis.- 8 Effect of Dietary Fatty Acids on Gene Expression in Breast Cells.- 9 Lipotrope Deficiency and Persistent Changes in DNA Methylation.- 10 Methionine Deprivation Regulates the Translation of Functionally Distinct c-Myc Proteins.- 11 Progressive Loss of Sensitivity to Growth Control by Retinoic Acid and Transforming Growth Factor-Beta at Late Stages of Human Papillomavirus Type 16-Initiated Transformation of Human Keratinocytes.- 12 Short-Chain Fatty Acids and Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms of Colonic Cell Differentiation and Transformation.- 13 Fish Oil and Cell Proliferation Kinetics in a Mammary Carcinoma Tumor Model.- Abstracts.
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