Birbrair | Tumor Microenvironment | Buch | 978-3-030-73121-2 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, Band 1329, 548 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 844 g

Reihe: Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology

Birbrair

Tumor Microenvironment

Novel Concepts
1. Auflage 2021
ISBN: 978-3-030-73121-2
Verlag: Springer Nature Switzerland

Novel Concepts

Buch, Englisch, Band 1329, 548 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 844 g

Reihe: Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology

ISBN: 978-3-030-73121-2
Verlag: Springer Nature Switzerland


This volume discusses novel concepts in cancer biology, focusing on different factors that affect the tumor microenvironment. Topics covered include sex-based differences in the tumor microenironment, dormancy in the tumor microenvironment, the influence of obesity on the tumor microenvironment, and much more. 

Taken alongside its companion volumes, Tumor Microenvironment: Novel Concepts covers the latest research on various aspects of the tumor microenvironment, as well as future directions. Useful for introducing the newer generation of researchers to the history of how scientists studied the tumor microenvironment as well as how this knowledge is currently applied for cancer treatments, it will be essential reading for advanced cell biology and cancer biology students, as well as researchers seeking an update on research on the tumor microenvironment.

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Weitere Infos & Material


1.   The Tumour Microenvironment and Circulating Tumour Cells: A partnership driving metastasis and glycan-based opportunities for cancer control.- 2.     Dormancy in the Tumor Microenvironment.- 3.    Tumor-associated tertiary lymphoid structures: A cancer biomarker and a target for next-generation immunotherapy.- 4.    Studying the tumor microenvironment in zebrafish.- 5. Pre-metastatic niche formation by neutrophils in different organs.- 6.  Tumor cell invasion and the tumor microenvironment: Special focus on brain tumors.- 7.  The dog as a model to study the tumor microenvironment.- 8.  EFFEROCYTOSIS AND THE STORY OF “FIND ME’’, ‘’EAT ME” AND “DON’T EAT ME” SIGNALING IN THE TUMOR MICRO ENVIRONMENT.- 9.  Color-coded imaging of the tumor micro-environment (TME) in human patient-derived orthotopic xenograft (PDOX) mouse models.- 10.  Mitochondria and the tumor microenvironment in blood cancer.- 11. Telocytes in the tumor microenvironment.- 12. Modeling the roles of astrocytes in the metastatic tumor cell microenvironment.- 13.  Roles of fibroblasts in microenvironment formation associated with radiation-induced cancer.- 14.  Tumor microenvironment-associated pericyte populations may impact therapeutic response in thyroid cancer.- 15.  The adrenergic nerve network in cancer.- 16.  Current treatment modalities targeting tumor microenvironment in castration-resistant prostate cancer.- 17.Brain metastases and tumor microenvironment.- 18.  MIGRATION STIMULATING FACTOR (MSF).  ITS ROLE IN THE TUMOUR.- MICROENVIRONMENT.- 19. Mechanical Signaling in the Mammary Microenvironment - from Homeostasis to Cancer.- 20.  Osteopontin Signaling in Shaping Tumor Microenvironment Conducive to Malignant Progression.- 21.  Progesterone receptor signaling in the breast tumor microenvironment.- 22.  Progranulin/GP88, a complex and multi-faceted player of tumor growth by direct action and via the tumor microenvironmen.- 23.  Sex-based differences in the tumor microenvironmet.


Alexander Birbrair received his bachelor’s biomedical degree from Santa Cruz State University in Brazil. He completed his PhD in Neuroscience, in the field of stem cell biology, at the Wake Forest School of Medicine under the mentorship of Osvaldo Delbono. Then, he joined as a postdoc in stem cell biology at Paul Frenette’s laboratory at Albert Einstein School of Medicine in New York. In 2016, he was appointed faculty at Federal University of Minas Gerais in Brazil, where he started his own lab. His laboratory is interested in understanding how the cellular components of different tissues function and control disease progression. His group explores the roles of specific cell populations in the tissue microenvironment by using state-of-the-art techniques. His research is funded by the Serrapilheira Institute, CNPq, CAPES, and FAPEMIG. In 2018, Alexander was elected affiliate member of the Brazilian Academy of Sciences (ABC), and, in 2019, he was elected member of the Global Young Academy (GYA). He is the Founding Editor and Editor-in-Chief of Current Tissue Microenvironment Reports, and Associate Editor of Molecular Biotechnology. Alexander also serves in the editorial board of several other international journals, including Stem Cell Reviews and Reports, Stem Cell Research, Stem Cells and Development, and Histology and Histopathology.



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