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Issue title: Comparative Pathobiology of Breast Cancer
Guest editors: Robert D. Cardiff
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Shull, James D.
Affiliations: Department of Genetics, Cell Biology and Anatomy and Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer, University of Nebraska Medical Center, 6005 Durham Research Center, 985805 Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE 68198-5805, USA. Tel.: +1 402 556 4633; Fax: +1 402 559 7328; E-mail: jshull@unmc.edu | Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Center for Comparative Medicine, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA
Abstract: The Norway rat has for many years been widely used as an experimental model for the study of breast cancer etiology and prevention. Mammary cancer can be induced in rats by a variety of agents. The mammary cancers that develop in the various rat models resemble in many respects the breast cancers that develop in humans. It is now clear that significant differences exist between different rat models with respect to the genetic bases of susceptibility to mammary cancer as well as the somatic genetic events that are associated with development of mammary cancer. In this review I summarize our current understanding of the genetic and genomics of mammary cancer in the rat, compare and contrast the genetic/genomic features of different rat mammary cancer models and discuss the relevance of these models to breast cancer in humans.
DOI: 10.3233/BD-2007-28108
Journal: Breast Disease, vol. 28, no. 1, pp. 69-86, 2007
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