Page 356 - 20dynamics of cancer
P. 356

REFERENCES                                                  341

                              Druckrey, H. 1967. Quantitative aspects in chemical carcinogenesis. In Tru-
                                haut, R., ed., Potential Carcinogenic Hazards from Drugs, pp. 60–78. Springer-
                                Verlag, Berlin.
                              Dyson, F. 2004. A meeting with Enrico Fermi. Nature 427:297.
                              Edelmann, L., and Edelmann, W. 2004. Loss of DNA mismatch repair function
                                and cancer predisposition in the mouse: animal models for human hereditary
                                nonpolyposis colorectal cancer. American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part
                                C, Seminars in Medical Genetics 129:91–99.
                              Egger, G., Liang, G., Aparicio, A., and Jones, P. A. 2004. Epigenetics in human
                                disease and prospects for epigenetic therapy. Nature 429:457–463.
                              Evans, H. J. 1984. Genetic damage and cancer. In Bishop, J. M., Rowley, J. D.,
                                and Greaves, M., eds., Genes and Cancer, pp. 3–18. Alan R. Liss, New York.
                              Fearnhead, N. S., Wilding, J. L., Winney, B., Tonks, S., Bartlett, S., Bicknell, D. C.,
                                Tomlinson, I. P., Mortensen, N. J., and Bodmer, W. F. 2004. Multiple rare
                                variants in different genes account for multifactorial inherited susceptibility
                                to colorectal adenomas. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of
                                the United States of America 101:15992–15997.
                              Fearon, E. R. 2002. Tumor-suppressor genes. In Vogelstein, B., and Kinzler,
                                K. W., eds., The Genetic Basis of Human Cancer (2nd edition)., pp. 197–206.
                                McGraw-Hill, New York.
                              Fearon, E. R., and Vogelstein, B. 1990. A genetic model for colorectal tumorige-
                                nesis. Cell 61:759–767.
                              Feinberg, A. P., and Tycko, B. 2004. The history of cancer epigenetics. Nature
                                Reviews Cancer 4:143–153.
                              Feldser, D. M., Hackett, J. A., and Greider, C. W. 2003. Telomere dysfunction and
                                the initiation of genome instability. Nature Reviews Cancer 3:623–627.
                              Felsenstein, J. 2003. Inferring Phylogenies. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, MA.
                              Fidler, I. J. 2003. The pathogenesis of cancer metastasis: the “seed and soil”
                                hypothesis revisited. Nature Reviews Cancer 3:453–458.
                              Fishel, R. 2001. The selection for mismatch repair defects in hereditary nonpoly-
                                posis colorectal cancer: revising the mutator hypothesis. Cancer Research
                                61:7369–7374.
                              Fisher, J. C. 1958. Multiple-mutation theory of carcinogenesis. Nature 181:651–
                                652.
                              Fisher, J. C., and Hollomon, J. H. 1951. A hypothesis for the origin of cancer
                                foci. Cancer 4:916–918.
                              Folkman, J. 2002. Role of angiogenesis in tumor growth and metastasis. Semi-
                                nars in Oncology 29:15–18.
                              Folkman, J. 2003. Fundamental concepts of the angiogenic process. Current
                                Molecular Medicine 3:643–651.
                              Forbes, W. F., and Gibberd, R. W. 1984. Mathematical models of carcinogenesis:
                                a review. Mathematical Scientist 9:95–110.
                              Ford, D., Easton, D. F., Stratton, M. R., Narod, S., Goldgar, D., Devilee, P., Bishop,
   351   352   353   354   355   356   357   358   359   360   361