书目名称 | Chemical Induction of Cancer | 副标题 | Modulation and Combi | 编辑 | Joseph C. Arcos,Mary F. Argus,Yin-tak Woo | 视频video | http://file.papertrans.cn/225/224346/224346.mp4 | 图书封面 |  | 描述 | In the approach to the analysis of disease, including, of course, cancer, two major thrusts may be distinguished. These may be referred to, in shorthand, as agents and processes: the causative agents (chemical, microbial, physical, environmental, and psychosocial) and the organismic processes, initiated and furthered by the agents, culminating in observable pathology (at the macromolecular, cytological, histological, organ function, locomotor, and behavioral levels). The past 25 years, since the appearance of the first volume of the predecessor series (1) authored by the Editors of this present volume, have seen an impressive number of studies on chemicals (and other agents) as etiologic factors in the induction of cancer. The major emphasis has been on the discovery of many chemical carcinogens of widely different structures, their metabolism by various tissues and cells, and, in turn, their molecular-biochemical effects on the cells. This rapidly expanded body of information, as effectively covered in the predecessor volumes, is an excellent entree to the second half of the overall problem of chemical carcinogenesis, the processes. The active agents trigger a large array of molec | 出版日期 | Book 1995 | 关键词 | Alanin; Amino acid; Calcium; Colon; DNA; RNA; Vitamin D; aging; angiogenesis; apoptosis; classification; gene e | 版次 | 1 | doi | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4612-4076-1 | isbn_softcover | 978-1-4612-8640-0 | isbn_ebook | 978-1-4612-4076-1 | copyright | Birkhäuser Boston 1995 |
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