Alterations in signal transduction pathways implicated in tumour progression during multistage mouse skin carcinogenesis
Open Access
- 9 May 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Carcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research
- Vol. 24 (7) , 1159-1165
- https://doi.org/10.1093/carcin/bgg067
Abstract
The multistage mouse skin carcinogenesis model, although an artificial one, is an ideal system to study the timing of qualitative and quantitative alterations which take place during the different stages of chemical carcinogenesis, allowing analysis of the events that lead to the transition from the stage of initiation to the stage of promotion and finally to the progression of carcinogenesis. In this review we focus on the role of the H- ras gene and its target molecules during mouse skin carcinogenesis. Besides H- ras , which is a critical target of chemical carcinogens, we report alterations in oncosuppressor genes. Finally, we examine the potential suppression of metastatic dynamics of spindle cells after biological or chemical inhibition of the signalling cascades involved in mouse skin carcinogenesis.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- The conversion of mouse skin squamous cell carcinomas to spindle cell carcinomas is a recessive eventThe Journal of cell biology, 1993
- Comparison of ras activation during epidermal carcinogenesis in vitro and in vivoCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1991
- Carcinogen-induced mutations in the mouse c-Ha-ras gene provide evidence of multiple pathways for tumor progression.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990
- A metabolite of the carcinogen 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene that reacts predominantly with adenine residues in DNACarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1988
- v-ras genes from harvey and BALB murine sarcoma viruses can act as initiators of two-stage mouse skin carcinogenesisCell, 1986
- Carcinogen-specific mutation and amplification of Ha-ras during mouse skin carcinogenesisNature, 1986
- Mouse skin carcinomas induced in vivo by chemical carcinogens have a transforming Harvey-ras oncogeneNature, 1983
- Properties of carcinogen altered mouse epidermal cells resistant to calcium-induced terminal differentiationCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1982
- Transforming activity of DNA of chemically transformed and normal cellsNature, 1980
- Passage of phenotypes of chemically transformed cells via transfection of DNA and chromatin.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1979