نتایج جستجو برای: mammary tumor

تعداد نتایج: 495583  

Journal: :Cancer research 1974
J E Richards G Shyamala S Nandi

apparent correlation between the susceptibility of a strain to mammary tumor development and the ability of its normal mammary gland receptors to bind estradici. The receptor appears to be in the parenchyma! elements of the gland. The spontaneous mammary tumor showed binding capacities significantly lower than the normal gland, based on wet weight tissue and DNA content. There is no correlation...

Journal: :Cancer research 1977
M Sluyser T Nouwen J Hilgers J Calafat

Levels of mammary tumor virus particles (types A and B) and levels of the virus antigen were assayed in hormone-dependent and -independent mammary tumors of GR mice. Various transplant generations of seven separate tumor lines were investigated. The results indicated that the tumors consisted of different cell clones, each of which exhibited a separate progressive expression and subsequent loss...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1972
R Axel S C Gulati S Spiegelman

Human breast cancers contain an RNA related to that of mouse mammary tumor virus. In 79% of the breast malignancies examined, this type of RNA is a 70S-component encapsulated with RNA-instructed DNA polymerase in a particle possessing the density characteristics of RNA tumor viruses. Further, the DNA synthesized by the human RNA enzyme complex hybridizes specifically with the RNA of mouse mamma...

2015
Susan Waltz Susanne Wells

The Ron receptor is overexpressed in human breast cancers and is associated with heightened metastasis and poor survival. Ron overexpression in the mammary epithelium of mice is sufficient to induce aggressive mammary tumors with a high degree of metastasis. Despite the well-documented role of Ron in breast cancer, few studies have examined the necessity of the endogenous Ron ligand, hepatocyte...

Journal: :Cancer research 1990
J M Minke C J Cornelisse J A Stolwijk N J Kuipers-Dijkshoorn G R Rutteman W Misdorp

Flow cytometric DNA analysis was performed on biopsies from 9 nonmalignant and 111 malignant (primary and metastatic) feline mammary lesions. In our series, 46.3% of the primary mammary carcinomas appeared to be aneuploid, whereas all but one benign breast lesion were diploid. The degree of aneuploidy in carcinomas was low, with a relatively high number of primary tumors (12 of 82) displaying h...

Journal: :Anticancer research 2017
Ana I Faustino-Rocha Adelina Gama Maria J Neuparth Paula A Oliveira Rita Ferreira Mário Ginja

BACKGROUND/AIM The effects of mast cells on carcinogenesis is not yet fully understood. This work aimed to disclose the role of mast cells in mammary carcinogenesis in a rat model. MATERIALS AND METHODS Mammary tumors were induced by the administration of N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) in three groups of rats. Animals from one group were treated with ketotifen immediately after MNU administrati...

Journal: :Cancer research 1986
L Hall A Henney D N Ralphs D G Herries R K Craig

RNA complexity analyses of total cellular polyadenylate-containing RNA isolated from lactating human breast tissue, human breast tumor tissue, and a mixture of established cell lines of mammary origin demonstrate extensive homology between the tissue RNA populations but suggest a decrease in the complexity of cell line nuclear RNA populations, with the exception of an early-passage MCF-7 cell l...

2010
Susan R. Ross

Mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV), which was discovered as a milk-transmitted, infectious cancer-inducing agent in the 1930s, has been used since that time as an animal model for the study of human breast cancer. Like other complex retroviruses, MMTV encodes a number of accessory proteins that both facilitate infection and affect host immune response. In vivo, the virus predominantly infects lym...

Journal: :Journal of virology 1990
F F Bolander M E Blackstone

In normal mouse mammary epithelium, insulin, cortisol, and prolactin are absolute requirements for mouse mammary tumor virus expression. Retinoic acid further increased mouse mammary tumor virus expression two- to threefold but only when triiodothyronine was also present; neither retinoic acid nor triiodothyronine alone had any effect.

1981
Fred R. Miller Daniel Medina Gloria H. Heppner

Four transplantable mammary tumors, three (66, 410, and 168cl) isolated from a spontaneously occurring strain BALB/ cfCSH mammary tumor and one (D2) arising from a BALB/c hyperplastic alveolar nodule were found to grow better in mammary fatpads than at s.c. sites. Furthermore, tumor growth was better (p < 0.05) in intact mammary glands than in cleared mammary fatpads for the D2, 410, and 66 tum...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید